CA1216210A - Reuseable heat transfer devices for the scalp - Google Patents

Reuseable heat transfer devices for the scalp

Info

Publication number
CA1216210A
CA1216210A CA000443898A CA443898A CA1216210A CA 1216210 A CA1216210 A CA 1216210A CA 000443898 A CA000443898 A CA 000443898A CA 443898 A CA443898 A CA 443898A CA 1216210 A CA1216210 A CA 1216210A
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
headband
head
crown
crown portion
releasably
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired
Application number
CA000443898A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Vernon E. Stewart
Richard W. Turner
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Allegiance Corp
Original Assignee
Vernon E. Stewart
American Hospital Supply Corporation
Richard W. Turner
Allegiance Corporation
Baxter International Inc.
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Vernon E. Stewart, American Hospital Supply Corporation, Richard W. Turner, Allegiance Corporation, Baxter International Inc. filed Critical Vernon E. Stewart
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA1216210A publication Critical patent/CA1216210A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61FFILTERS IMPLANTABLE INTO BLOOD VESSELS; PROSTHESES; DEVICES PROVIDING PATENCY TO, OR PREVENTING COLLAPSING OF, TUBULAR STRUCTURES OF THE BODY, e.g. STENTS; ORTHOPAEDIC, NURSING OR CONTRACEPTIVE DEVICES; FOMENTATION; TREATMENT OR PROTECTION OF EYES OR EARS; BANDAGES, DRESSINGS OR ABSORBENT PADS; FIRST-AID KITS
    • A61F7/00Heating or cooling appliances for medical or therapeutic treatment of the human body
    • A61F7/02Compresses or poultices for effecting heating or cooling
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61FFILTERS IMPLANTABLE INTO BLOOD VESSELS; PROSTHESES; DEVICES PROVIDING PATENCY TO, OR PREVENTING COLLAPSING OF, TUBULAR STRUCTURES OF THE BODY, e.g. STENTS; ORTHOPAEDIC, NURSING OR CONTRACEPTIVE DEVICES; FOMENTATION; TREATMENT OR PROTECTION OF EYES OR EARS; BANDAGES, DRESSINGS OR ABSORBENT PADS; FIRST-AID KITS
    • A61F7/00Heating or cooling appliances for medical or therapeutic treatment of the human body
    • A61F2007/0001Body part
    • A61F2007/0002Head or parts thereof
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61FFILTERS IMPLANTABLE INTO BLOOD VESSELS; PROSTHESES; DEVICES PROVIDING PATENCY TO, OR PREVENTING COLLAPSING OF, TUBULAR STRUCTURES OF THE BODY, e.g. STENTS; ORTHOPAEDIC, NURSING OR CONTRACEPTIVE DEVICES; FOMENTATION; TREATMENT OR PROTECTION OF EYES OR EARS; BANDAGES, DRESSINGS OR ABSORBENT PADS; FIRST-AID KITS
    • A61F7/00Heating or cooling appliances for medical or therapeutic treatment of the human body
    • A61F2007/0001Body part
    • A61F2007/0002Head or parts thereof
    • A61F2007/0008Scalp
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61FFILTERS IMPLANTABLE INTO BLOOD VESSELS; PROSTHESES; DEVICES PROVIDING PATENCY TO, OR PREVENTING COLLAPSING OF, TUBULAR STRUCTURES OF THE BODY, e.g. STENTS; ORTHOPAEDIC, NURSING OR CONTRACEPTIVE DEVICES; FOMENTATION; TREATMENT OR PROTECTION OF EYES OR EARS; BANDAGES, DRESSINGS OR ABSORBENT PADS; FIRST-AID KITS
    • A61F7/00Heating or cooling appliances for medical or therapeutic treatment of the human body
    • A61F7/02Compresses or poultices for effecting heating or cooling
    • A61F2007/0225Compresses or poultices for effecting heating or cooling connected to the body or a part thereof
    • A61F2007/0231Compresses or poultices for effecting heating or cooling connected to the body or a part thereof hook and loop-type fastener
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61FFILTERS IMPLANTABLE INTO BLOOD VESSELS; PROSTHESES; DEVICES PROVIDING PATENCY TO, OR PREVENTING COLLAPSING OF, TUBULAR STRUCTURES OF THE BODY, e.g. STENTS; ORTHOPAEDIC, NURSING OR CONTRACEPTIVE DEVICES; FOMENTATION; TREATMENT OR PROTECTION OF EYES OR EARS; BANDAGES, DRESSINGS OR ABSORBENT PADS; FIRST-AID KITS
    • A61F7/00Heating or cooling appliances for medical or therapeutic treatment of the human body
    • A61F7/02Compresses or poultices for effecting heating or cooling
    • A61F2007/0244Compresses or poultices for effecting heating or cooling with layers
    • A61F2007/0249Compresses or poultices for effecting heating or cooling with layers with a layer having low heat transfer capability
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61FFILTERS IMPLANTABLE INTO BLOOD VESSELS; PROSTHESES; DEVICES PROVIDING PATENCY TO, OR PREVENTING COLLAPSING OF, TUBULAR STRUCTURES OF THE BODY, e.g. STENTS; ORTHOPAEDIC, NURSING OR CONTRACEPTIVE DEVICES; FOMENTATION; TREATMENT OR PROTECTION OF EYES OR EARS; BANDAGES, DRESSINGS OR ABSORBENT PADS; FIRST-AID KITS
    • A61F7/00Heating or cooling appliances for medical or therapeutic treatment of the human body
    • A61F7/02Compresses or poultices for effecting heating or cooling
    • A61F2007/0261Compresses or poultices for effecting heating or cooling medicated
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61FFILTERS IMPLANTABLE INTO BLOOD VESSELS; PROSTHESES; DEVICES PROVIDING PATENCY TO, OR PREVENTING COLLAPSING OF, TUBULAR STRUCTURES OF THE BODY, e.g. STENTS; ORTHOPAEDIC, NURSING OR CONTRACEPTIVE DEVICES; FOMENTATION; TREATMENT OR PROTECTION OF EYES OR EARS; BANDAGES, DRESSINGS OR ABSORBENT PADS; FIRST-AID KITS
    • A61F7/00Heating or cooling appliances for medical or therapeutic treatment of the human body
    • A61F7/02Compresses or poultices for effecting heating or cooling
    • A61F2007/0268Compresses or poultices for effecting heating or cooling having a plurality of compartments being filled with a heat carrier
    • A61F2007/0276Compresses or poultices for effecting heating or cooling having a plurality of compartments being filled with a heat carrier with separate compartments connectable by rupturing a wall or membrane
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61FFILTERS IMPLANTABLE INTO BLOOD VESSELS; PROSTHESES; DEVICES PROVIDING PATENCY TO, OR PREVENTING COLLAPSING OF, TUBULAR STRUCTURES OF THE BODY, e.g. STENTS; ORTHOPAEDIC, NURSING OR CONTRACEPTIVE DEVICES; FOMENTATION; TREATMENT OR PROTECTION OF EYES OR EARS; BANDAGES, DRESSINGS OR ABSORBENT PADS; FIRST-AID KITS
    • A61F7/00Heating or cooling appliances for medical or therapeutic treatment of the human body
    • A61F7/02Compresses or poultices for effecting heating or cooling
    • A61F7/03Compresses or poultices for effecting heating or cooling thermophore, i.e. self-heating, e.g. using a chemical reaction
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61FFILTERS IMPLANTABLE INTO BLOOD VESSELS; PROSTHESES; DEVICES PROVIDING PATENCY TO, OR PREVENTING COLLAPSING OF, TUBULAR STRUCTURES OF THE BODY, e.g. STENTS; ORTHOPAEDIC, NURSING OR CONTRACEPTIVE DEVICES; FOMENTATION; TREATMENT OR PROTECTION OF EYES OR EARS; BANDAGES, DRESSINGS OR ABSORBENT PADS; FIRST-AID KITS
    • A61F7/00Heating or cooling appliances for medical or therapeutic treatment of the human body
    • A61F7/10Cooling bags, e.g. ice-bags
    • A61F7/106Cooling bags, e.g. ice-bags self-cooling, e.g. using a chemical reaction

Abstract

ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE
Improvements in reuseable, heat exchanging head pieces for cooling or heating substantially the entire hair bearing (scalp) area of the human head; improvements in a blank form for use in the manufacture of such product for the said purposes for filling with reuseable heat exchanging materials; a reuseable, heat exchanging head piece employable with cancer chemotherapy patients in order to cool the scalp zone of the head in order to prevent hair loss during chemotherapy treatment and injections;
improved reuseable devices and processes for heat exchanging the human scalp, including such with a variable or adjustable size headband constriction and limited, yet controllable upper head surface of skull surface compression for full, substantially "holiday" free cooling or heating; further improvements in such heat exchanging head pieces wherein the blank form and heat exchanging head pieces are alternatively used or available for use in a one-shot or nonreuseable configuration.

Description

~21~2~0 BRIEF D~SCRIPTION OF T~E INVENTION
One primary purpose of the subject device ( in i-ts primary application) is to chill substantially the entire hair bearing area of the scalp before, during and after a chemotherapy injection in order to minimize the quantity of such chemicals that reach (through the human blood stream) the hair roots or follicles. This is accomplished by three actions particularly enabled by the particular and unique construction of the subject reuseable device:
(1) Mild (adjustable for head size) constriction around the patient's head at the forehead-temple-rear skull base level by the headband portion of the device which action cuts do~n blood circulation into the scalp area;
(2) Chilling of all blood rising through the head circulatory system into the scalp area by cold transmitted through the headband portion, per se, circumferentially of the head; and
(3) ~ssentially whole-scalp cold contact effected by a multiplicity of cells (three in the headband and two in the crown portion) containing heat exchanging ma-terial, such created by first fastening the headband in a constrictive relationship and then fastening the crown portion to the headband in a compressive relationship.
The subject device must not only provide mild con-striction and compression with cooling heat exchange, but also must last for approximately an hour. First, in optimum procedure, the entire device is refrigeratively cooled before application o~ the device to the head of the chemotherapy subject some fifteen minutes before the chemotherapy injection. In such case, the entire scalp zone is precooled `1 -- 1 --/~ ~

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and blood circulation into the scalp zone, as well as -there-within, is impeded by blood vessel contraction through cooling ~artery-vein-capillary) before treatment. The total course of a typical injection is 30 minutes. The subject device remains on the patient's head continuously during the injection, as well as the noted 15 minutes therebefore.
Thereafter, following the chemotherapy injection, the subject device optimally remains on the patient's head for an addition-al 15 minutes. The chemotherapy chemical is presumably (typically) metabolized, deactivated or absorbed in the body by the end of this time.
It is well known in the prior art to employ the use of a constrictive band around a patient's head in chemotherapy to impede circulation to minimize hair loss. This serious impedance of circulation (which is required by the use of a constrictive band along) is not only painful, comprising severe treatment, but potentially dangerous to the patient due to vessel compression and severe circulation restriction during treatment. The subject combination of cooling and mild constriction by the headband, such coupled with mild compression in the crown portion, is, at the very least, equally effective to the named drastic treatment and, in most cases, far superior in effect thereto, without the stress and noted problems of the constrictive band alone.
The concept of cooling the scalp of the chemotherapy patient to retain hair during actual chemotherapy is further not novel, per se. Ice pack applications have been known to prove effective. Applicants are also aware of the use of a multicellular, helmet-like cap having (typically) four segments useable for the same purposes of the subject device.

The latter employes two side segments, one top segment and one rear segment, to applicant's knowledge. It is also known X

1 1~ /111 '-" ~216Z~O

to employ refrigerable ~nonfreezing, moldable) liquids (familiar to the art from long known prior art freezer cooled cold packs used for various purposes) in the place of endothermic reaction materials.
Deficiencies in the prior art devices which are cured by the subject invention include essential removal or prevention of "holidays" in the scalp heat exchanging device at any seams thereof. Yet further, new in a reuseable scalp heating exchanginy device, there is mild constriction, totally independent of the crown heat exchange of the head, provided around the forehead-temple-skull base zone. Full cooling of not only the entire, noted headband constriction zone is provided, but, additionally, 1 h / ~

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a continuous, co~lpressile contact of heat exchan~incJ cold ov~r the entirC~ upper he~d.
This device is an improvernent and development of the device shown in our Uni~ed States Paterlt No. 4,382,445 of May 10, 1983 for "Heat Transfer ~evices For The Scalp". This subject invention and improvement is a further development ~r that concept and invention, particularly in providing a reuseable device and function.
In the use of devices employing rerefrigerable sub-stances, it is necessary to avoid, by careful control of freezer temperature, the chilling of the reuseable device to an excessively low temperature which will cause frostbite problems. Yet further, with a reuseable device, because of -the highly personal nature of the subject described treatment, the possibility of cross infection between patients, the necessity of cleaning between uses, the requirement of storage between uses and, as well the necessity OL providiny a suitable, con-trolled refriyeration source at or adjacent the chemotherapy area, numerous contingencies must be met and provided for.
The subject device essentially comprises the followinc3 elements (listed without limitation, includin~ optional elements):
(1) a basic multicellular (preferably three cell) head-band portion fabricated to be larger than a normal subject's head diameter, whereby to provide an overlapping wrap therearound;
(2) a crown portion or top section preferably com~risinc3 two skull top overlyinc3 cells runnincJ at ric~ht an~les to the front one (or parts) of the headband portion cells, such prefer-ably permanently connected to the hea~ban(lat the top ed~e t~ereof~d irc~

2~62~QI

at the forehead overlying portion thereof;
(3) ~ rear headband attachment strap fixed at one end on one side of the basic headband por-tion, such adapted to overlie and removably stick to the other end of the head-band portion in headband size controlling relation, as well as constriction controlling relationship; and
(4) Attachment tabs on the crown portion (later-ally positioned of the two overlying heat exchanging cells in the crown portion) for attachment of the sides of the crown portion to the sides of -the headband overlying the subject's temples.
Hereinafter is disclosed and described a reuseable scalp heat exchanging device of great utility and efficiency which particularly involves and employs:
(1) A head encircling, size adjustable, constric-tion adjustable, multicell heat exchanging headband portion;
(2) A head top overlying, contacting and heat exchanging crown portion which is adjustably connectable (for head size, constric-tion and compression) between the front and rear portions of the headband in a fitting and fittable manner;
and (3) Suitable connection and engaging means for inter-grating, compacting and molding together the entire assembly, on a patient's or subject's head of (a) heat exchanging head-band and (b) heat exchanging crown portion, so that the entire hair bearing scalp zone, or almost all thereof, is essentially under uniform heat exchanging contact, constriction and compres-sion with greatest (adjustable and con-trollable) constriction in the headband zone and, effectively continuous, minimum holiday, heat exchanging contact over the patient's entire scalp.

Sta-ted otherwise, absolute maximal, uniform, heat exchange is provided, with carefully controllable compression lb/r~

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and constr:iction not only over the entire scalp zone but, mostpar~icularly, in -the cri-tical headband zone, where the basic blood circulation into the scalp area and head top area originates and e~ ts. Thus, safety and comfort are maintained to the maximum degree, yet heat exchanging efficiency is not in any way sacrificed.
Other applications (without limitation) include the cooling of the head in case of certain types of trauma to in-hibit bleeding after initial treatment of injury; cold and/or heat application to the entire upper head zone in the case of headache or migraine; use and preparation of the head and scalp zone for sur~ical penetration into the head in neurosurgery and the like. The pressure constriction option in the headband may be employed or not as required~ T,~ith or without the latter, complete, uniform, upper entire head exchange may be obtained by use of the subject device.
Because the head piece construction of the subject primarily reuseable device is a significant improvement and development over theearlier invention of U.S. Patent No.4,382,446, supra, -the subject improved head piece construction is also available for USf` in a nonreuseable or one shot confi~uration.
One form (and a cheaper form) of a nonreuseable heat exchan~in~
head piece is shown in that patent. ~Iowever, the instant device improves thereover in ease of applicability as well as fine ad-justability of fit. ~ccordin~ly, as an option, applicants have additional]y developed this device for a one shot, nonreuseable use. The only differences in the latter over the in~entive re-useable structure shown in this case comprise:
(1) The substitution of actuatable, one-shot heat jrc ~?~

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exchange means (such as granular ammonium nitrate and water bags in the cells for the cooling use); and (2) The provision of the headband portion prefer-ably formed as a single cell, rather than a multiplicity of cells, so that the liquid portion of the heat exchanging mixture (such as water held in water bags prior to activation of the device) may fully mix with the heat exchanging chemical (such as ammonium nitrate in the cooling function). Thus, we have, in the subject invention, additionally provided improvements in nonreuseable or one shot applications of the heat exchanging head piece, as well as in the reuseable sort.
THE PRIOR ART
Applicants are aware of the following prior art references and patents which relate to (1) the use of cold (or scalp hypothermia) in cancer chemotherapy, (2) heat exchange of the body (parts thereof), (3) means therefor and (4) head (or parts thereofl heat exchange, particularly cooling.
With respect to loss of hair in cancer chemotherapy and the prevention thereof, particularly see "Prevention Of Adriamycin-Induced Alopecia With Scalp Hypo-thermia", authors Judith Beam, R.N., M.S., Sydney E. Salmon, M.D. and Katherine Griffith, R.N., New England Journal Of Medicine, December 1979.
This article additionally cites 13 refere~nces with respect to chemotherapy, adriamycin, hair loss in cancer chemotherapy and prevention of hair loss by scalp cooling of patients receiving adriamycin (doxorubicin).
Applicants are aware of the following U.S. patents directed to heat exchanging caps for the scalp which include the concept of cooling:

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~Z16210 ~ errick 770,031, issued September 13, 1904 for "Hat Provided With Receptacle";
Morris 1,627,523, issued May 3, 1927 for "Face Mask";
Zelony 3,092,112 for "Therapeutic Compress" issued June 4, 1963;
Andrassy 3,463,161 "Temperature Maintaining Device", issued August 26, 1969;
4,118,946 Tubin, "Personnel Cooler", issued October 10, 1978;
Zebuhr "Slurry Cooling Of Helme-ts", 4,172,495, issued October 30, 1979.
The following U.S. patents are directed to localized cooling of parts of the body, sometimes including parts of the head:
Meinecke 919,614 "Hot Water Or Ice Bag", issued April 27, 1909;
Baker 3,491,761 "Adjustable Ice Bag ~arness", issued January 27, 1970;
Morse 3,545,230 "Flexible Cooling Device And Use Thereof'l, issued December 8, 1970;
Berndt 3,717,145, issued February 20, 1973 for "Cold Pressure Bandage";
Pilotte 3,822,705 7'Refrigerant Wrap For An Animal's ' Limb", issued July 9, 1974;
Lebold 3,809,684 issued Ju~ne 17, 1975 for Ill~ot a~ Cold Pack";
Pelton 4,055,188 issued October 25, 1977 for "Therapeutic Wrap".
The following U.S. patents are directed to heating devices for the scalp or head:
Larson 1,710,882 "Scalp Treating Device", issued April 30, 1929;

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~Z~;210 Hyer 3,13~,891 "Neck And Face Dry Heat Applicator", issued May 26, 1964;
Hariu 3,839,621, issued October 1, 1974 for "Body Heating Device'l;
Mantell 3,9~8,569, issued October 26, 1976 for "Heated ~ead Enclosure";
Murray 4,061,898 issued December ~, 1977 for "Heat Cap"; and Walter et al 4,147,921, issued April 3, 1979 for "Heat Treating Articles".
A device for local cooling of extremities, including the heat, by hypothermic spray of the area is seen in ~mirnov.
3,587,577 "Device For....Hypothermy....", issued June 28, 1971.
As previously noted, this application is a particular improvement over the construction of Donald E. Truelock,et al seen in United States Patent No. 4,3~2,446, issued on May 10, 1983 for "~eat Transfer Devices For The Scalp".
OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION
The basic object of the invention is to provide greatly improved reuseable means, devices and processes for the effective application of cooling to substantially the entire hair bearing area of the human scalp to aid in prevention of hair loss during cancer chemotherapy.
Another object of the invention is to provide such reuseable means, devices and processes which supply and effect such cooling for a sufficient time, to the proper degree and without excess cooling or freezin~ (when refrigerated to the proper degree and temperature before use), in a most efficient and effective manner.
~`` A further object of the invention is to provide such ~ 9 _ irc ~;

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reuseable mean~,, devices and processes wherein th~r~ additionally is provided some adjustable circulation limitation into and out of the scalp area by adjustable mild constriction of this zone, or the lower periphery thereof (including the forehead), the circulation limitation provided in the proper head position and area (approxima-te cap or ha-t headband area) and further cushioned for comfort to the subject, patient or user.
Another object of the invention is to provide sub-stantial improvements in the construction, devices and processes of the United States Patent to Donald ~. Truelock et al, No. 4,3~2,446, issued ~ay 10, 1983 for "Heat Transfer Devices For The Scalp", particularly in the realm of reuseable such devices.
Another object of the invention is to provide such reuseable means, devices and processes which may be applied to any individual's head within the normal range of sizes and shapes, regardless or head size and/or shape, with reasonable ease of application, the device requiring (for optimum application) but a single helper, the ultimately applied reuseable device being snug and comfortable on the subject's head after application, such easily and readily removable therefrom after performance of the chemotherapy injection for storage, cleaning, recooling and reuse as desired or required.
Another object of the invention is to provide such reuseable means, devices and processes which are rug~ed in con-struction, simple in structure for both application and removal, readily clean and stored, and having a long life under repeated and continuous usage.
Another object of the invention is to provide such reuseable scalp heat e~changing devices which provide, through jrc~

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proper application permitted by the structure thereof, sub-stantial total area contact of the human scalp area for heat exchange, particularly for cooling in a chemotherapy applic-ation, when once applied. Such contact is without or with minimal "hol~days" which might result in hair loss or possible hair loss (in the chemotherapy application) if such were present. With proper application, substantially full and continuous scalp application and heat exchange is provided, both in the headband zone and the crown zone of the device. Additionally, the cooling constriction provided in the headband minimizes the effect of the presence of any head contact holidays permitted by the presence of seams.
Another object of the invention is to provide such reuseable scalp heat exchanging means, devices and processes wherein several practical, convenient structural means of adjustment during application of the device are provided, both in the headband and crown zones, which means may be efficiently employed to effect snug, proper, continuous contact fit over substantially the entire human head scalp area. (The process of application first involves the headband application and fit which optionally may include adjustable constriction of the device to diminish blood circulation into the scalp zone. Thereafter, once that fit is properly effected, a crown zone application and fit is made. The latter completes assembly of the overall scalp contacting cap construction with a seperate adjustment, such independent of, yet connected to the headband zone, in such manner that any user head size and shape (or combination thereof within the normal human range) may be readily adapted to and effectively and completely fitted and properly heat exchanged for whatever application is desired.
Still another object of the invention is to provide X

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Z~6210 ~` i 1 ¦ a reusea le, chemotherapy-associated, upper head portion cover wh~
.aximally protects the patient's head against hair loss by ¦ providing a combination Or (l) around-the-head constriction and l'l (2) continuous contact scalp heat exchan~e (coolin~, for maximum ¦ effectiveness in minimizing and preventing hair loss due to the physiological action of drugs used in cancer chemotherapy).
Another ob~ect of the invention is to provide such ~reuseable structures, devices and processes which are (l) mass ¦produceable, (2) uniform in structure and operation, (3) long ¦term storeable without deterioration under proper conditions, ¦~4~ sanitary in use if initially clean and (5) readily cleanable, storeable and rechillable after a given use and application.
Yet another object of this invention is to provide a llreuseable segmented or multi-cellular heat exchanging device ¦! for the entire human hair-bearing scalp area wherein the safety, ¦convenience and utility of a multi-cellular device is present, ¦yet wherein the device is readily, easily and conveniently applied to the patient's head and scalp in such manner that the l¦necessary seams between the cells minimally act (in the headband 1! and crown areas as nonheat exchange or "holiday" zones, there ,being provided essentially continuous, pressurized contact against the sub~ect's head of the cellular, heat exchanging material carrying parts of the device when applied.

! Another object of the invention is to provide reuseable 25 1I devices, constructions and processes of the character described, whQrein there are provided separate, multi-cellular headband and crown heat exchanging areas or zones, yet wherein, when the device is assembled and applied to the head of the chemotherapy llpatient or user for any application, in proper manner as an llassembled cap~ there is a substantially unitary, substantially '11 continuous bo~y of cooling of heat exchanging surface applied to the subject's or user's head.
Yet another object of the invention is to provide new, reuseable means and methods of the character described for heat-ing or cooling (depending on the heat exchan~e applied to the device before use) of substantially -the entire upper head zone of a patient or person in new, effective and efficient ways, without discomfort to the patient or threat of injury or damage to the anatomy or physiology of the patient's head.
Yet another object of the invention is to provide a nonreuseable, one shot, heat exchanging head piece which incorporates, to a large extent, the improvements of th~ sub~ect reuseable head piece and thus further improves over Truelock et al U.S. Pa.ent No. 4,382,446, supra, particularly with respect to ease of applicability and ability to well and precisely fit the head of the user.
Another object of the invention is to provide an improved heat exchanging head piece involving a single cell head-band and a multicell crown portion, the cells in the crown and 2Q headband portion having heat exchanging materials therein of the type wherein mixing of a liquid portion thereof with a dry portion thereof creates endothermic or exothermic effects.
Still another object of the invention is to provide a new heat exchaning head piece construction which is readily applied and removed, the construction being provided, alternatively, as a re-useable construction or a nonreuseable, one shot construction, each configuration having an optimum structure for application, use and removal wherein the maximum heat exchanging effect most advanta~-eous to the patient is achieved with minimum or no detrullental effects.
~ O-ther and further objects of the invention will appear ~, j i ~r~ ' - 13 -~Z~6Z~O

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l in the course of the following description thereof.
THE DRAWINGS
In the drawings, which form a part of the instant ¦ specification and are to be read in con~unction therewith, an ¦ embodiment of the invention is shown and, in the various views, ¦ like numerals are employed to indicate like parts.
¦ Fig. 1 is a bottom, inside view of the empty blank for ¦ the sub~ect scalp heat exchanger before the cells of the blank are ¦ filled with chemical material f`or repeated refrigeration and/or heating and thereafter sealed. A part of the figure is cut away in one portion to better illustrate the construction of one filler opening for one headband cell. This figure shows the lower, inside surface of the device (when assembled and in use on a patient) which lies against the scalp of the ~atient.
Fig. 2 is a view taken along the line 2-2 of Fig. 1 in the direction of the arrows (with the walls of the blank expand ~d apart from one another for clarity in visualizlng the separate ¦ layer constructions thereof).
l Fig. 3 is a view taken along the line 3-3 of Fig. 1 in ¦the direction of the arrows (with, again, the walls of the blank ¦expanded away from one another to better illustrate the separate ¦constructions thereof).
Fig. Il is a vertical plan view of the laid out device lof Fig. 1 taken from the opposite side thereof (comprising the ,5 1 outside with respect to application to a patient), with the cells of the blank filled with heat exchanging or temperature effective , materiàl and sealed to contain such.
Fig. 5 is a view taken along the line 5-5 of Fig. 4 in l the direction of the arrows.
1 Fig. 6 is a view taken along the line 6-6 of Fig. 4 in " ' 1 lZ16210 ,1 .

1 ll the direction of the arrows.

Figs. 7-12, inclusive comprise various views from I various vantage points of the device assembled together in the ¦ manner of application to a user's, subject's or patient's head.
However, Fig. 7 is the only view which shows the patient's head.
Fig. 7 is a three-quarter perspective view from the ! front and slightly to one side of the head of a subject with the instant device finally assembled and engaged in use arrange-l ment on the sub~ect's head, such essentially adjusted for sub-¦ stantially full scalp heat exchange.
Figs. 8-10, inclusive show the assembled device of ¦Fig. 7 (without the sub~ect's head therein) in three views, ¦sequentially, in order: front, side and rear views.
¦ Fig. 8 is a front view of the device of the subject invèntion in assembled form.
Fig. 9 is a side view, taken from the right hand side , of Fig. 8 looking to the left in the view (or from the right hand i side of Fig. 7 looking to the left in the view).
I Fig. 10 is a rear view of the assembled device of ~Figs. 7-9, inclusive.
Fig. 11 is a top plan view of the assembled device of ¦¦Figs. 7-10, inclusive with the front of the device to the left in the view of Fig. 11.
l! Fig. 12 is a bottom view of the assembled device of ~! Figs. 7-11, inclusive with the front of the device to the left ¦lln the view of Fig. 12.
Fig. 13 is a three-quarter perspective view of the ~,lfievice of Figs. 4-12, inclusive taken from above and sli~htly to the rear in a first stage of application to the head of a patient or sub~ect (absent that head) as the headband is first bein~

~2~6210 1 ll wrapped about the subject's head~
tl Fig. 14 is a rear view of the device of Figs~ 4-13, inclusive, showing a later stage of assembly than that of Fig. 13 ll (after the headband portion has been secured in desired con-
5 ¦ strictive relationship and the forward engagement tabs of the crown portion have been secured to the headband sides), but prior to securement of the back end of the crown portion on the rear portion of the headband and also prior to the engagement and securement of all the rear lateral crown portion tabs on the rear headband side portions).
Figs. 15-17, inclusive are directed to a showing of the subject improved device adapted to a nonreuseable or one ¦shot use. Specifically, the differences in this construction over the construction seen in the previous figures lie in:
(1) The head band being a single continuous cell, rather than three separate cells; and (2) The cells of the headband and crown portions receiving nonreuseable heat exchange materials (such as rupturable¦
water bags and quantities of granular a~monium nitrate for the ^ooling function).
Fig. 15 is a vertical plan view of the laid out de~ice (or filled blank form) taken from the outside with respect to application to a patient, portions of the headband and one of the crown portion cells, as well as one of the water bags in the 25 l latter, cut away to better illustrate the subject construction.
Fig. 16 is a view taken along the line 16-16 in the direction of the arrows.
i Fig. 17 is a view taken along the line 17-17 of Fig. 15 in the direction of the arrows.
Figs. 18 21, inclusive show additional details of the I ~Z16210 -1 application and use of the reuseable device of Figs. 1-14, inclusi ve ¦ in stages of application thereof to the head of a patient.
¦ Fig. 18 is a rear perspective taken from abo-~e of the ¦ device of Figs. 1-14, inclusive applied to the head of the ¦ patient with the view taken in sequence between the assembly ¦ stage of Figs. 14 ~before the rear flap of the crown portion ¦ is secured) and the fully assembled structures of Figs. 7-12, ¦ inclusive.
¦ Fig. 19 is a view taken subsequent to the view of ¦ Fig. 7 (full assembly) and shows the wrap of an elastic bandage o-~er the device for purposes of uniform contact and compaction ¦of the heat exchan~ing cells of the head band portion with ¦respect to the head of the user and one another.
¦ Fig. 20 is a frontal view of a patient after the ¦applicatlon of the elastic bandage of Fig. 19.
¦ Fig. 21 is an enlarged detail of an ear protector ¦construction which may be seen applied to the ears of the users of the device in Figs. 7 and 19.
RATIONALE OF THE INVENTION
In order to clearly and unquestionably understand the significance of the described and illustrated scalp heat excnanger the following information is extracted and paraphrased from the Beam, Salmon and Griffith article mentioned in the above entitled section "The Prior Art".
The psychological impact of chemotherapy-induced alopecia (hair loss) represents one of t:~e more devastatin side effects of cancer chemotherapy. In some instances, ~he psychological consequences of this lead patients to refuse l potentially curative chemotherapy. The hair loss problem is j severe with the anthracycline antibiotic Adriamycin (Doxorubicin), I

I ~2~62~Q `-1 1 a chemotherapy compound which has a spectrum of efficacy in-¦compassing many types of cancer (e.g., breast, lung and ovary sarcomas, lymphomas and leukemias).
l As early as 1973, an Abstract was published reporting 1 good protection against Adriamycin - induced hair loss in 12 or 15 patients by regional application of chilled air to ~the scalp. More recently, the use of cryogel packs held on the scalp with stockingette produced good protection against hair ' loss over a short time in 20 to 40 patients on the same therapy.
It would appear that two advantages could accrue from cooling the scalp (scalp hypothermia). The first of ¦these is vasoconstriction resulting from such, which decreases ¦the amount of drug reaching the hair follicles. Secondly, ~ Adriamycin (as numerous other drugs) requires temperature-Idependent metabolic processes for cellular uptake and thus ¦¦would have decreased action at reduced temperature.
In Beam et al the study involved the prophylactic treatment of cancer patients receiving adriamycin-cyclophosph-l amide combination chemotherapy with a brief scalp hypothermia ! procedure at the time of each injection. The particular pro-¦cedure described used crushed ice and disposable plastic bags.
This treatment proved to be simple, inexpensive, well tolerated i and universally available. It further proved to be quite effec-l tive in preventing hair loss and the patients studied had good ¦ or excellent preservation of scalp hair, usually obviating the ¦ need of wigs for cosmetic purposes. An even higher portion ~! Of patients receiving chemotherapy doses of lesser stren~th I had good protection. Thus, it would seen that the protective ,¦ scalp cooling was, to a certain extent, inversely related to '1I dosage, so that a longer duration or more profound coolin~ mi~ht l _'~

1 12~6210`
l I

1 ~ prove useful to consistently prevent hair loss at greater dosages.
¦ In the actual Beam et al procedure, foam pads cut ¦ from the heels of disposable hospital slippers were placed over the patient's ears to insulate them against excessive cold exposure. Ice packs consisting of crushed ice in 60 by 60 centimeter plastic bags were applied (one in front, one in back) to cover the entire scalp. The ice packs were secured with 15 centimeter size Ace bandages wrapped in turban style. Such a turban was applied 5 minutes prior to each injection and left in place 30 minutes following the injection for a total of 35 to 40 minutes of scalp cooling.
The noted scalp iceing procedure reduced Adriamycin-induced hair loss substantially in relation to extensive prior historical experience with that drug combination. Good protection against hair loss was frequently maintained for the full 6 to 8 months period of drug administration. In the article, it snould be noted, it was also hypothesized that a longer initial cooling interval perhaps should be employed.
STRUCTURAL AND HEAT EXCHANGE MATERIALS
The basic purpose of the sub~ect invention is to ¦cool the scalp areas of chemotherapy patients (together with ¦limited scalp zone constriction) in order to prevent hair loss in cancer chemotherapy. However, the subject construction and ~ development is not limited to such use or mere cooling. Speci-1 fically, that is, the entire construction may alternatively be used as a scalp~heating cap, device or cover merely by heating ¦¦the device before application rather than cooling in a freezer.
¦ In such use, the construction of the device would be the same, l however with heating produced rather than cooling upon appl ca-¦tion to a patient's head. A proper filler able to withstand l -19-I

12~6Z~

either or both repeated heating and cooling must be employed in the cells of the device, depending on its purpose.
Typical, but not limiting, gel or reuseable fluid materials employable in the cells of the subject device in body heat exchange are seen in some of the patents above listed including Zelong112, Andrassy 161, Morse 230 and Pelton 188. ALso note Brennan 4,190,054, issued February 26, 1980 for "Therapeutic Bandage". One reuseable, typical heatable/chillable gel employable in this application in the cells of the subject structure could be composed of 40%
glycerine, 52~ distilled water and 8% starch. Suitable colored dyes and disinfectant substances (for example, form-aldehyde) may be added to this formulation to enhance appear-ance and prolong life.
It is further well known in the art to provide (1) plastic films and laminate films (2) plastic film pouches, packages and containers and (3) heating or refrigerating package constructions of plastic film material. Typical materials making up such films include polyehtylene, cello-phane, polypropylene, polyester, etc. It is~.also known in the art to provide certain types of rupturable film packages and refrigerating packages, the latter seen in the Robbins et al patent, infra. Since polyehtylene and polypropylene are heat sealable, they are also commonly used as the internal. member of a film laminate in a package con-struction, with a polyester or cellophane layer comprising the external laminate layer. Laminate films seemingly seal better, and the seals last longer, than simple, non-laminate films.
The patent to Perino, No. 3,250,384, issued May 1, 1966, discloses (Figs, 7-9, inclusive) cooling packages of the type described and, as well, various materials useful in the lb/~

12162~0 films for the respectiv~ container~ khereof. If should also be understood that double wall polyethylene films or multiple layer polyethylene films may be used, as seen in the p~tents to Scholle, U.S. Patent 2,898,027, Sachs U.S. Patent 3,122,197 and, as well the method patents to Anderson et al 3,130,647 and Makraur 2,721,691.
Polyethylene, polyvinyl and polymylar films of one or more layers or laminates may further conveniently be employed in this invention. A layer of non-allergenic paper may conveniently be lamina~ed theret.o for comfort, better skin sensation and condensation absorption (as an outside layer).
R~USEABLE AND SINGLE USE DEVICES
The construction of the partioular instant disclosure and spectification is one particularly adapted for and designed to be employed in reuseable or reuse situations. That is, the device is preferably to be used repeatedly in heat exchange of -the scalp, without throw-away or destruction, until excessive wear occurs. Depending upon the cell filler materi.als, the heat exchange devices may be stored at room temperature or under re-frigerating conditions.
The construction in United States Patent No. 4,382,446 issued May 10, 1983 for "Heat Transfer Devices For The Scalp" is one particularly adapted to single use or "one-shot" application where, within the cells of the device, a dry chemical and a bag of water mixable therewith are employed to produce an endothermic or exothermic reaction. However, alternatively, that, construction, as spelled out in the noted patent therefor, could be used employ-ing a refrigerable (rerefrigerable) or heatable (reheatable) com-pound in the headband and crown section cells. In the instantcase, the construction is optimally adapted to the reuse option (re-;, . ~;` - 21 -jrc~ `J

I ~216210 I
I

1 ¦chilling or reheating), but alternatively may be single use or ¦one-shot.
In such latter case, known prior art systems and com-¦ pounds may advantageously be employed. Refrigerating and heating ¦packages (cold packs and hot packs) of a type containing, within ¦the outer pack, a dry chemical and a bag of water mixable there-¦with (on bursting of the water bag) to produce an endothermic or exothermic reaction, respectively, are well known to the art.
¦me patent to Robbins, et al U.S. Patent 2,925,719, issued ¦February 23, 1950 for "Refrigerating Package" and the patent to Callouette, U.S. Patent 3,643,66~, issued February 22, 1972, ¦for "Therapeutic Pack For Thermal Applications" typically show the state of the art with respect to sUch. The water may be l isolated from the particular dry chemical before activation by l means other than bagging.
The Robbins et al patent, supra, discloses a refrigeratin package including an outer envelope formed of a suitable, flexible, fluid-tight sheet plastic material (for example polyethylene, vinyl or acetate), an inner envelope formed of the same material, ia quantity of dry refrigerating chemical SUCh as ammonium nitrate ¦Iwithin the oUter envelope and a qUantity of water or other hydrous ~chemical disposed within the inner envelope. When the packa~e is to be activated, an inward squeezing force is manually applied ~Ithereto so as to effect the rupture of the inner bag. ~pon S-lch ¦~upturing of the inner bag, the water originally contained there-mixes with the dry chemical so as to result in a solution ving either a much lower or much higher temperatUre than the ~riginal temperature of the package.
l The point to be made here is that the subject improved 3C I levice may, in addition to employing chemical compounds, fluidS

~ -22-1 or gels of the reuseable (rechillable and/or reheatable) type, may employ, alternatively, conventional single use or one-shot heating and/or cooling systems of the type ~ust described. The ¦ outer container, in any case, may be single ply, multiple ply, 5¦ a laminate of different materials or a plurality of plies of the same material or the like. The inner contalner or bag (if there ¦ is one) may be single layered, multiple layered, multi-ply, ¦ laminate, weakened for easy breakage or the like.
I DESCRIPTION OF THE BLANK
l Referring first to Figs. 1-3, inclusive, therein is ¦ shown a blank for the sub~ect human scalp heat exchanger before ¦ the cells of the blank are filled with heat exchange materials (or temperature effectable materials) for heat exchange. In ¦ further discussion, the terms 1'heat exchange materials" and/or 15 ~ ¦ "temperature ~ffectable materials" will be taken to include either ¦or both: (1) reuseable fluids, gels or substances which may be ¦rechilled, reheated, or both, for multiple use of the device and ¦ (2) single use or single shot materials such as, for example, ¦water bags and ammonium nitrate, in the case of a cooling or 20chilling combination. That the subject device is particularly ¦employable for the reuseable function is shown by the filler ¦openings shown and to be described for the headband portion cells.
In the event that single use materials were to be employed there-¦with, these openings would be generally considerably larger for linsertion of water bags, as well as granular endothermic mater,al or exothermic material (upon mixing of water therewith).
As above described, Fig. 1 is a bottom or inside plan l view of ~his empty blank (the side which is to be next to the ! scalp zone of the user), while Figs. 2 and 3 are views taken ~ ;a]ong designated lines of the blank with the walls of the blank . 1216210 ~

1 expanded apart from one another for clarity in illustrating separate cells thereof. In the views of Figs. 2 and 3 and, as well, those of Figs. 5 and 6, it can be seen that the walls of the blank and heat exchanger are shown as single ply. However, laminates, such as, typically, polyethylene or polypropylene on the inside with polyester or cellophane comprising the outer laminate layer, may be employed. For convenience in description, it will be assumed that each side wall of the portions of the blank or heat exchanger is monolithic in construction.
Also as previously described, it should be understood that the views of Fig. 1 and 4 are inverted from one another with Fig. 1, the empty blank, showing the inner surface of the blank before filling. This is the surface next to the patient's head which is to be heat exchanged. On the other hand, Fig. 4 shows the outside surface of the filled heat exchanger with the heat exchanging materials sealed into the cells thereof. This is the surface of the device which is away from the patient's scalp or head in use.
Referring, then, first to Fig. 1, at the bottom of this view is seen an elongate rectangular headband portion generally designated 30. Headband portion 30 has lower edge 30a, upper edge 30b and free end edges 30c and 30d. Except for filler openings 30e, 30f and 30g in the lower edge 30a of headband portion 30, the entire headband portion 30 is peripherally sealed in conventional manner by a heat seal or ultra sonic weld, ¦etc. Since the headband portion 30 has an inside wall generally designated 31 and an outside wall generally designated 32, such ~peripheral seal would provide a single, elongate cell or bag save ~or the filler openings noted. Optionally, such elongate ¦single bag could be ~illed with granular ammonium nitrate (or other chemical) and one or more water bags in the manner disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 4,382,~6, supra. In such case, but a single lar~e filler openin~ may be provided in the headband portion 30 or two larger such.
Preferably, however, additional hea~ seals or ultra-sonic welds are provided at 33 and 34 thus to provide three cells or bags 35, 36 and 37 in the headband portion 30, each served by a filler opening. Each of these cells is to be filled with reuseable heat exchanging or temperature a~fectable material, chemical or substance or, alternatively, single use heat exchang-ing materials of the character previously described. In the latter case, again, where, typically, a water bag and a chemical such an ammonium nitrate would be typicaliy employed, the filler openings would be of larger size. The cells 35-37, inclusive may be, and preferably are, of substantially equal size. Alterna-tively, they may be of different size with the center cell 36 either larger or smaller than the end cells 35 and 37. In the event cell 36 is of larger size than the end cells 3~ and 37, it may hold a typical quantity of 550 grams with the outer cells holding 410 grams of heat exchange or temperature affectable material. In the reverse case, the center cell, as an example, may hold 410 grams, with the outer cells holding 550 grams. These are examples and not to be limiting. A tab 3~ having removably engageable means or material 39 thereon is fixedly attached in a lesser portion of the length thereof to the inner face of cell 35 with a preferably greater length portion thereof extending past free end 30c for a purpose to be described.
Reference at this time is made to the lower portion of Fig. 4 which shows the headband portion of the blank in filled con-figuration from the opposite side. On cell 35, the outside , ~

~, -25 -irc~

~2~62~0 1 1 face thereof (side 32 of the headband portion 30, per se), there ¦ is provided an elongate tab or strip 40 which, in the greater ~ortion of the length thereof, overlies and adheres to the outer l surface of cell 35. In a lesser length portion thereof, strip 40 extends past end 30c in a length equal to the free length of ~ab 39 on the other side thereof. These two free portions are ~used or fixed together, one with the other. Removably securable o~ engaging material is provided on the external surface of tab ~ along substantially the entire length and width thereof as at ~1. In Fig. 4, with respect to cell 37, on the outer face thereof there is provided an elongate strip or length 42 which is secured fixedly to the said outer face of cell 37 in the position shown.
Strlp or length 42 has removably securable or engageable material ¦ 43 thereon in substantially the entire length and width thereof.
¦ A crown portion generally designated 44 has a rear or ¦ rearward end and edge 45, side edges 46 and 47 and a forward ¦ or front end and edge 48 which is integral with or secured to ¦ the center of the upper edge of headband portion 30. In fabri-¦ cation of the blank being described, two single ply or laminated sheets configured precisely to the configuration of the overall sneet of Fig. 1 may be laid, one on the other, in alignment ¦I wi~h one another and heat or otherwise sealed to one another at ¦¦ ~h~ side, ends and edges, as well as interiorly thereof, in or~er to give the blank configuration being described (before filling). Tnis is the preferred and optimum method of fabrica-ion. The seals may be heat seals, ultrasonic welds or other Dn~ectiOns optimum to the plastic sin~le ply, multiple ply or la~Lnate sheets employed.
`~ Crown portion 44 has several oarts. The first of these 33 'I c~mprises two center, forward cells 43 and 50 whicn are separated -2~-~21 G2~0 from one another and interiorly defined by seal 51. They are exteriorly defined by edge seals 52 and 53 which run along the side edges 46 and 47, define the interior bound-aries of tabs to be described and then move centrally at the forward portion of crown portion 44 to join, with and at top seal and connection 48, with head portion 30. Thus, edge seals 52 and 53 run into and are continuous with the upper edge seal 30b of headband portion 30 so there is a complete front end seal of compartments or cells 49 and 50, as well as a top seal to cell 36 of the headband portion, at 48. The rearward boundaries of cells 49 and 50 are provided, in filled condition (see Fig. 5), by transverse heat seal or ultrasonic weld (or the like) 52.
The second part (or parts) of the crown portion comprise paired sets of tabs 53a and 53b (forward on the crown portion) and 54a and 54b (rearward or intermediate on the crown portion). These tabs are unfilled (but sub-stantially air exhausted) pockets defined by circumferential heat seals or ultrasonic welds, etc. Elongate strips or lengths are fixed thereto on the inside surfaces thereof as at 55a and 55b on tabs 53a and 53b and 56a and 56b on tabs 54a and 54b. Removably engageable and securable material pieces are fixed to the faces of these panels, such as strips of a well known, commercial hook/loop plastic construction giving strong but removable and repeatable securement when pressed against like panels or strips of material.
The third part of crown portion 44 involves the rearward attachment flap genera~ly designated 57 having parallel side edges 57a and 57b which are continuations of the edge seals 52 and 53, respectively. These comprise, in the unfilled blank, feed or loading channels 58 and 59 defined between the side edge X

lb/~-~216~0 seals and the center seal 51 extending lnto flap 57. On the inside surface of crown portion 44, which is generally designated 44a as opposed to the outer su~face 44b, there are provided a pair of preferably rectangular panels 60 and 61 firmly attached to the inner wall of flap portion 57.
These panels have removably securable or engageable material of the character previously described at 62 and 63 thereon.
Referring to Fig. 4, at the top thereof, there is seen the end seal 64 which serves to seal off the feed channels 58 and 59 after the cells 49 and 50 have been filled with reuseable temperature affectable material or single use heat exchanging materials, etc. The end tabs, then, are unfilled cells circumferentially sealed upon themselves, but prefer-ably substantially air exhausted.
Thus it may be seen that what has been provided in the blank of Figs. 1-3, inclusive comprises a multicelled, sealable blank optimally defined by sealing together identical sheets of laminated, single ply multi ply plastic, such configured in a certain manner, Each of the cells or compartments has an open end or filler opening for filling.
THE FILLED BLANK
In order to more adequately describe the blank structure and sealing thereof, some discussion of the construction of Fig. 4 has already taken place. However, the filling of the blank, its completion and the filled blank, per se, will now be discussed.
With the construction provided and shown as described ~; in Figs. 1-3; comprising the assembled, heat (or otherwise) sealed blank with, however, access openings into each of the cells, compartments or bags 35-37, inclusive in the head-band and 49 and 50 in the crown portion, filling may be under-taken. With respect to the headband portion 30, this typically involves, in the ~ ----lZ~6210 1 case of reuseable material, the insertion of the desired quantity of material or chemicals through the filler openings. This ¦could take place in a following typical, but not limitin~, ~nner.
l Assuming a formula (somewhat different from that pre-¦viously given) for a reuseable filler material in the reuseable device comprising distllled water 58.3%, medical grade glycerine (U.P.S 96) 39%, a standard gelling agent such as Carbopol 940 ~.5~ and liquld formaldehyde 0.2%, as well as sodium hydroxide o~ a 10% solution in water, filling and seal could be accomplished as follows. (It might be noted that the purpose of the glycerine is to prevent solid freezing, the ~elling agent is to produce the desired gel, the formaldehyde is to prevent bacterial growth and the sodium hydroxide is to set the gel. The latter being the case, the water, glycerine, gelling agent and formaldehyde are first all mixed and comprise a liquid.) With the materials prepared, the formed blank of Fig. l is then positioned, if it is desired to fill the headband cells first, with the lower edge 30a of the headband portion at the top of a vertical suspension of the blank with the rearward edge 145 of the crown portion hanging vertically down~ardly therefrom.
¦The mixture noted is then poured into filler openings 30e-30g, ¦ inclusive and the gel setter (NaOH) then added. l~hen the gel ¦ is set, air is removed from the remainder of the cells 35-37, ¦ in question and the heat seals at 30a completed across openings ~ 30e-30g, inclusive. The inlet spouts then ~ay be trinmed off for uniformity. In the construction shown, the fill quantities could be as given elsewhere, typically, equal quantities of 410 grams, equal quantities of 550 grams or unequal quantities of 410 and 550 grams, as specific examples.
In filling of the cells 49 and 50, whether they are ~2~62~0 filled before or after the headband 30 cells 35-37, inclusive, the device may be suspended by suitable holders with the passageways 58 and 59 o~enable or o~en upwardly and the balance of the device extending substantially vertically downwardly therefrom. At this time, the mixture of water, glycerine, gelling agent and disinfectant or antibacterial agent, in the mix form, are poured into cells 49 and 50 in the quantity desired. As soon as they are filled, the gel setting agent, sodium hydroxide, may be added and the gel set. Once this is accomplished, the seal 52 is effected across the top of the cell portions, but below wall portions 57a and 57b and then the end heat seal 45 made. Air is preferably removed from cells 49 and 50, to the very maximum extent possible, or fully, before sealing and, again, from the compartments between seals 52 and 45, before sealing, so that they are hollow, but not air filled.
In the event that the cells of the crown and head-band are filled with one-shot materials, wider filler openings must be provided at 30e, f and g. This is accomplished simply by merely limiting the heat seals - surrounding such. In this case, granular ammonium nitrate (if cooling is desired) is first inserted into the cells when they are in proper orientation for filling, then a water bag thereafter. After removal of air from the cells, heat sealing across the filler openings may be effected.
With respect to cells 49 and 50, when they are upwards, either as first filled or second filled, the granular ammonium nitrate is added through passages 58 and 59, then the water bags and, after removal of air from the filled cells, the seal 52 is first made. Then, after clearing the air from the compartments above seal 52, seal 45 may be made.

X

lh/~!

~Z~62~

Usin~ suitable machinery and procedure, seals 52 and 45 may be made simultaneously, with air removal from all noted portions. Also, air removal and opening sealing and trimming may be effected simultaneously wi-th respect to the headband portion cells, given proper machinery.
DIMENSIONS
The following typical and optimum dimensions are given with respect to the previously described blank and filled scalp heat exchanging device. While the dimensions given are not absolutely critical, they are, indeed, optimum, functional for the purpose described and commercial. The length of headband 30 is preferably sub-stantially 29 and 1/2 inches in blank, with its width 5 inches. The length of the crown section in the blank, from seal 48 to rear edge 45, may be 12 3/4 inches. The width of the crown rear end tab or filler channel portion may be slightly less than 7 inches. The width of the crown portion 44 at its front end next attachment 48 (inboard of the seals defining the tabs 53a and 53b) is about 11 and 1/2 inches. Each of the tabs 53 and 54 are about 3 and 3/4 inches long and they range in width from 1 and 1/2 inch to a maximum of 2 and 1/2 inches at the inboard portions of tabs 53a and b. The length of strip 40 may be about 10 inches on the cell 35 and 4 and 1/2 inches therebeyond. The length of strip 42 is about 9 and 1/2 inches. The full length of tab or strip 38 is approximately 7 and 1/2 inches.
APPLICAI'ION OF SCALP HEAT EXCHANGER
To apply the device to a patient, assuming rerefriger-able fluid fills the cells (and/or reheatable such), it must be refrigerated or heated to the proper temperature, depending upon whether the heat exchange is heating or cooling. Should the temperature affectable material or heat exchanging system comprise rup-turable bags of liquid and dry mixing exothermic or endothermic ~ - 31 -1 ~/'~';

Z16Zl 1 ~¦ react ~ chemical, the device ~ir~t must be activated. For the purposes of initial description, a cooling function would be assumed (for the primary object of the subject device, specificall , l use with chemotherapy patients) and, as well, a reuseable fill ¦ in the cells of the device.
¦ Assuming the latter and that the device is at the temperature or cooling or heating level optimum and desired, application may be effected in a number of different ways to achieve effective results. One such way will be described. It 1~ is ~referably to have at least two people to aid assembly of the device, including the patient. A physically able indi~idual, ¦ however, may apply the device themselves. With a physically ¦ incapacitated patient, two aides ~ay be required for application.
~ In the case of a completely physically able person, ¦the crown portion of the device is laid on top of the subject~s ¦head to basically support the crown portion with the lower ?ortion ¦at 48 above the patientls forehead. Then, grasping the end ¦portions of cells 35 and 37 of headband portion 30, the patient ¦may effect connection of the releasably engageable material 39 23 ¦on strip 38 with the equivalent on the outside surface of cell 37, ¦specifically strip 42 and material 43. This engagement ~ay easily ¦be made with the patient's hands behind his/her head with a l tightening and slight compression of the headband portion around ! ~he head. Once this is done, then the patient, grasping the rear headband ~ith one hand and the crown rear tab closely adj~cen i end 45 with the other, may engage the releasably securable material 62 and 63 on strips or patches 60 and 61 with equiv~len~
~material on strip 40 at 41. This adjustment is made in a m~nnQr that pulls the crown portion cells against the top of the patient' head, as well as centering over the head and enabling such to ~1~ 1216Zl 1 j extend downwardly on each side of the crown thereof.
¦ At this point, the side closures may be effected with the releasably engageable material 41 and 43 on strips 40 and 41 laterally of the patientls head, the engaging strips (on tabs 55 and 56) being pulled downwardly, outwardly and forwardly and/or rearwardly to make sure the entire scalp area is overlaid by the cells of the device including those in the headband portion and crown portion. Maximum and even scalp contact are ~oth to be achieved by abutting crown and headband cells.
When an assistant is present, as is preferably the case, the assistant can be used to hold the crown portion free ~f the patient's head while a headband connection is made and then effect the crown connections, the back first, then the sides in order.
If the patlent is unable to contribute at all, two assistants may effect the mounting and application of the device to the patient's head with one holding the crown section free, the other m~king the headband connection, then the two of them completing the crown connections at the rear of the headband and at the sides thereof. Optionally, after the device is on the patient's head, the assembled cap may be overwrapped with an e'astic ¦ bandage, stretching it slightly in order to hold the cap securely ¦ on the patient's head, providing additional compression thereon, ¦ such bandage being fastenable with a clip or tape.
¦ In the event the device employs single use or one-shot chemical materials (tSUch as, for cooling use, granular ammonium nitrate and water segregated therefrom by a separate bag or ~he like in the cells), the device must be activated before applied.
In such case, it would be laid down flat on the flat upper surface of the table or the like in the manner of the showing of Fig. 4.
Ihe operator then, one by one, presses down on the water bags I ' ~2l62~o 1 ¦or bag in each individual cell with the heel of one hand to ¦activate tburst) them. Once this has been done, the previously ¦described steps of application to the patient's head would be in order.
! With respect to the stages of application, reference first may be made to Fig. 4. This is the outer surface of the device as it is laid on a table before application is to be made to the pateint's head. In Fig. 13, the device is shown with the crown portion being held in substantially vertical position with the sides and free ends of the headband portion being brought around for connection together, as previously described, to pro-vide a continuous headband before the rest of the assembly is effected. Looking at Fig. 14, this essentially gives the position l of the device as it would be on a patient's head with the rear ¦end portion of the crown and the rear portions of the cells ¦thereof uplifted to display the rear headband connection. T;~o ¦of the side tabs are shown down against and engaged with the ~`~ ¦headband by the Velcro or removably engageable material, which ¦generally would not be the case in first assembly. The vie-~
o~ Fig. 14 does show the continuous headband circle made and its ¦ end attachments, as well as how the crown tabs come down to ijengage the strips on the side faces of the headband free end cells When the headband encirclement has been made (or is being made) it is most important, at this juncture, that the ~5 ! user or aide adjust the height of the headband and its position around the head of the subject at the desired level in front, at the sides, and in the baclc. This includes essentially an entire forehead overlap, an ear overlap and the bottom part OI' tne !
l skull overlap at the rear. (At this juncture, it may be mentioned 33 that, typically, plastic insulating sleeves (not seen) m~y be * 4r~ k ~Z~62~0 l slipped over the sub~ect's ears to protect them from excessive chill, if needed or desired.) Fig. 7 shows a three-quarter perspective view, from the front, of the sub~ect with the completed heat exchanging device on the sub~ect's head. The cap device there comprises a unit held together by: (l) the head~and to headband end con-nection, (2) the crown section rear flap to headband connection an~ (3) the crown side tabs to headband outer side connections.
~i~en this basic assembly, the unitary device can be ad~usted to finer precision and comfort for the user/wearer by manipula-tion of the side tabs and their engagement with respect to one another and the engaging strips of the side panels of the head-band. Full hair area contact, as well as full forehead contact is preferably achieved, with the usual exceptions of the hair zones on the upper neck and very lowermost skull portion of the user. As noted, the application and use of a further compacting resilient bandage may give additional compression, particularly in the headband zone, if desired.
Thus it may be seen that substantially entire head or head top heat exchange, as well as overall head contact and compaction or compression and headband constriction, may be achieved in ad~ustable fashion for each individual user and patient.
¦ INTEGRATED DEVICE DESCRIPTION
I
2~ ¦ The subject heat exchanging headpiece for cooling or heating the entire or substantially the entire scalp (hair ~bearing) area of the human head comprisQs, in combination:
(l) An elongate, substantially rectangular headband ~ortion 30 which is adapted to continuously and circumferen~ially wrap around the intermediate upper portion of a human head, jl 12~6210 1 ! including the forehead, the temple-ear head side zones and the lower back portion of the cranial vault.
(2) ~eans are provided, engageable between the free ends of the headband portion 30, which are adapted to secure ~ the neadband free end portions 30c and 30d together, one against the other, closely adjacent one anothcr or overlapping one another, to form a normally continuous and optionally (but pre-~erably) compressive or constrictive headband. This tension is ~lly adjustable by the essentially infinite adjustment possible ¦ ~tween the strips and tabs 38, 39 and 42, 43.
(3) The headband portion most preferably comprises ¦three, substantially equal volume hollow bags or cells of sealed, ¦liquid-tight construction, the individual bags filled with ¦temperature effectable or heat exchanging materials for repeat-¦able or reuseable or, alternatively, single shot or single use application.
(4) A crown portion for the head piece is provided having a forward edge 48 secured essentially to the central l portion of headband 30 at the top edge of cell 36. Crown portion 1 44 preferably comprises at least two elongate hollow bags of ¦sealed, liquid-tignt construction. Each such bag or cell 49 ¦and 50 is filled with temperature ~ffectable or heat exchanging ~aterials for reuseable or single use applications.
(5) Means are provided at the rear edge or end of ~own portion 44, such as the tab having rear edge 45, which 3re adapted to secure the crown portion rear end to a portion of ~he headband substantially 180 away from and opposed to the crown portion forward edge securement to the neadband portion at J 48. The specific parts of this means here shown are the Velcro~
!l or other equivalent material patches 60 and 61 which releas^.bl~
I ~ ~r.~e~4~

Il I
1 ¦engage with strip 40 and material 4i thereon.
¦ (6) Means are provided for securing the side edges of ¦the crown portion against or to the side upper edges of the head-~band free cells or end cells 35 and 37, that is, against the ¦~pper edges thereof at 30b. Such means involve the tabs 53 and 54 with the removably engageable patches thereon 55 and 56 which ~eleasably engage with materials 41 and 43 on strips 40 and 42.
It thus may be seen that, when the free ends of the headband portion 30 are secured together, the rear tab or end o Or ~he crown portion 44 is secured to the headband portion and ~h~ ~id~ tabs 53 and 54 on the crown are also secured to the he~d~nd sides, a continuous, scalp contacting head piece for ~bs~antially completely and uniformly heat exchanging the hair ~æaring area or zone of the human scalp is provided. It is ~e~s~i~le to form the headband portlon of two elongate cells or a ~ing].e elongate cell, particularly in the case of single use ~eat exchanging materials or single shot such. In the two cell ~ituation, the seam between the inboard ends of the cells will ~ecessarily be centrally of the headband.
The optimum lorm of the headband for reuseable or ~e~eatable application involves the presence of three individual c~lls ~n the headband, as at 35-37, inclusive, such of sub-~-~a~ially equal size and volume or, if of different volume, t~ outer cells preferably equal volume and inner cell different ~Dlu~e. The center cell 36 preferably is at least the width the headband-crown connection, or substantially that, to the ~rDwn porti~n, as seen at 48. A single cell or two cells in the ~ea~band is best in single use applications, the former seen ~n T~u~lock et al, supra.
In the crown, optionally, the entir,e crown cell portion 'I Z~6;~
may be but a single cell. However, this is preferably not the case and the most optimum form is that seen, specific-ally, parallel, preferably equal volume cells or bags 49 and 50 having a single central seam 51 at right angles to connection 48 therebetween. The tabs on the crown section are preferably spaced substantially as indica~ed, that is, the front pair of tabs 53a and 54b positioned substantially at the front edge of the crown section, while the rearward tabs 54a and 54b are positioned about intermediate the length of side edges 46, 47 from the rear termini of tabs 53 to seal 52. It should be noted that, at the front edges of tabs 53, the connection, to the headband portion, of the front part of the crown at 48, is lesser length than the full width of cells 49 and 50 thereat. This permits small portions of those cells to lie downwardly past -the headband with respect to the patient's head and this con-struction is preferable. Such serves to fill in the coverage at the corners and provide full heat exchange for the front portion of the head.
2 GE:NERAL REMARKS
o According to the best available records, some 75 million chemotherapy doses were given in the United States of America in 1979. This number has been increasing, from year to year.
It is no-t commercially or medically practical to employ a chin-tie or under-the-chin tie in order to maintain a device of the character described cinched on or tightly applied to the subject's head. The reason for this is because of the unfortunate real possibility of vomiting problems occuring during the actual chemotherapy process.
With the subject device, it has become (as opposed to the earlier Truelock et al, supra, device) possible or a physi-- 3~ -11~/ ' ' lZ16Z10 1 ¦cally able sub~ect or patient to apply this device without the cooperation of a helper, aide or nurse. It is, of course, easier to apply it with help. In any case, any reasonably able patient can certainly readily and perfectly apply the device wlth ~ut a single aide or helper. ~ single aide or helper can ap~ly t~e device to a helpless patient in some circumstances, but, in general, under conditions of this sort, two aides are ~est.
~ptionally, the subject device may employ surfaces of nDn-~llergenic sulfide paper laminating to polyethylene. The ~urpose of the use of such paper or surfacing in hospital products is to minimize water condensation. Thus, condensation on the l patient's head, hospital gown, any towels used or sheets, if the ¦ ~a~ient is in bed, would be minimized.
l The most optimum times of application of this device can described as ~ollows. The device should be fitted to the scalp ~n cooléd or chilled condition (cooled for cancer chemotherapy) 3~d left in place at least 10 minutes prior to the I.V. chemo-t~erapy drug in~ection. The device is, of course, left in place during the entire effective time of action of the drug, ~hich is typically a minimum of 40 minutes after completion of ~r~g administration. The 28F operating temperature of an e~lciently used water-ammonium nitrate pack (of the sort used ~n a single shot application) will produce good results. Tempera-~e control is critical with a nonself limitin~ device. It 3~t not be cool or heated to the point where discomfort, frostbit ~r b~rning of the patient takes place.
With respect to results, the positive effects recited ~n the Beam et al article are, at the least, to be expected to be ach~eved. At the very worst (~lder the most ri~orous condition ~Z16Z10 of chemotherapy to a given patient, depending on the patient's condition and the intensity and frequency of chemotherapy dosing), the subject device will minimize hair loss.
By employing a rerefrigerable or reheatable compound, the subject device becomes reuseable. This approach, as noted, may raise certain problems, including excessive chilling or heating. To some extent, some hospitals do not prefer the use of reuseable devices. While to a certain extent this may be because of convenience of billing procedures to the patient, additionally, device cleaning and cross contamination problems, between patients, as well as storage, must be considered. The optimum manner for a reuseable device to be employed is for single patient utilization. Additionally, the provision of refrigeration devices or heating devices reasonably adjacent to application points must be considered with the use of this construction.
I,t has been discovered that the presence of seams 33 and 34 do not substantially reduce the effective use of the heat exchange in the hatband or headband area, particularly when constriction is employed. When an elastic bandage is additionally employed over the headband, with slight stretch thereof and additional compression, such holiday areas at the seams are further minimized because of compaction of the cells with respect to one another. The contact or overlap of the cells at the rear end of the headband avoids holidays in this zone. It is most important to have full, continuous heat exchange of the forehead zone because of the numerous blood vessels passing therethrough. This is one reason for having the center cell 36 present in a multicell construction of the headband.
There sould be a minimum area of "holidays" in the X

lb//~

. I ~Z~62~0 1 a~plied heating or cooling cap. This is first established by having all the cells (headband and crown portions alike) so full that, in the applied cap, with constriction and compression, l substantially full coverage of the hair growing area of the head (scalp) can be obtained and, yet, substantially contlnuous abutment of one cell with respect to the other can be accomplished Secondly~ this is accomplished by constricting the headband cells upon the head in encirclement thereof and overlapping or contacting the free end headband cells. ~urther, pulling the rear ends and sides of the crown portion top cells down into ¦ contact with the headband cells in assembly stops edge holidays.
¦Finally, an additional overlie of elastic bandage in constriction, ¦after the side edges of the crown cells have been brought into ¦contact with the side top edges of the headband cells by use 10f the tabs 53 and 54, is further effective.
The subject device, as noted, has two or more head size adjustments. The first of these effected is the hatband or headband adjustment in the headband portion, per se. ~'his is a complete circle of compression on all blood vessels leading into the scalp. The second adjustment is the crown size. This is obtained, after the headband is closed, by pulling the rear of the crown portion far enough back to fairly tightly compress the crown cells on the patier.t's head when the rear crown con-l nection to the 180 degree opposed headband portion is made.
The third adjustment is made at the sides of the crown of the device with the tabs engaging against the side fac-s of the headband end cells. This involves a lateral compression of the crown cells following the longitudinal such.
In the event that the engagements called out that is, 3 t~e removably engageable attachments, involve a Velcro type (J~O~QL

12~6210 attachmentl where one face of such attachment is essentially loops and the other face of such attachment is essentially hooks, then, typically, the loop portions would be found in the attachments 41 and 43 on strips 40 and 42. Hook attachments, then, would be on patches 60, 61 and tab attachments 56a and b and 55a and 55b, as well as interior strip 38 and the material 39 thereon. The zones noted may be reversed in the hook/loop presentation. The point is that strips 38, 55a, 55b, 56a, 56b, 60 and 61 all attach - 10 onto one or both of strips 40 and 42.
The subject device is not useful in leukemia, because of the circulating cancer cells in the blood.
It is important to realize that, while it is desirable to have some pressure in all zones of the heat exchanging device, in contact on the head, and particularly in the headband for limited constriction of the vessels going into the head, one definitely wants to avoid the ' creation of a tourniquet effect which can result in pain, fainting, psychological effects and possible damage to some blood vessels.
With respect to the reuseable, freezer-type cells, if a temperature of minus ten degrees F is inadvertently reached, frostbite will result. This means it is necessary to both carefully control the freezer temperature (if such `-were to be used in a hospital or clinic~ and, as well, test the heat exchanging device temperature before application.
The noted minimum temperature of ammonium nitrate-water combination does not give frostbite. If such mixture were used, it would typically be 50% ammonium nitrate and 50%
water by weight. With respect to ammonium nitrate-water packs, the ambient temperature at which the devices are stored relate to the water heat when activated and thus the ultimate temperature reachable.

~ - 42 -lb/,'`' lZ16Z~O
Figs. ]5-17, Inclusive Referring to Figs. 15-17, inclusive, therein is shown a variation of the subject construction wherein the useable or repeated use option with respect to the preferred embodiment previously described is abandoned.
That is, instead of having rechillable or reheatable temperature affectable material for heat exchange in the headband portion cell or cells and crown portion cell or cells, such is replaced by heat exchanging chemicals which are effective only upon mixing and activation thereof.
In the case of chilling or cooling, the preferred mix is granular ammonium nitrate and water. In the time honored form of use of such (going back, at least, to the Robbins et al U.S. Patent 2,925,719, issued February 23, 1960 for "Refrigerating Package", as well as Caillouette, U.S.
Patent 3,643,665, issued February 22, 1972 for "Therapeutic Pack For Thermal Applications") the dry granular chemicals and a rupturable bag of water are provided within a compart-ment of cell effective for cooling or heating upon rupturing of the bag of water by compression through the wall of the compartment or cell when ready for use.
Aside from the change in the materials received in the headband portion and crown portion of the device, the primary change (which is optional but preferred) in the device when liquid cellular heat exchanging materials are employed lies in the provision of the headband portion being made up of but of a single cell. In this manner, the filling of the headband cell portion with the water ba~s and granular material is simplified (filling may be made from one or both ends of the headband portion) and, as well, when the device is activated and the water mixes with the granular material, the headband portion then acts as a truly continuous band around the head without X

lb/~' ~ lZ16210 i-j~ any problem o~ holidays or gaps in heat exchange at the seams between the cells. While a single cell may be employed in the head band portion with the reuseable materials, such is definitely not preferred because of the tendency of a chilled gellike ~ateria ¦ to aggregate in zones of less pressure or tension around the head and also not uniformly adapt to circumferential contact and engagement as is the case with a more fluid substance like water.
~ccordingly, although individual cells may be provided in the ~eadband portion of the one shot or nonreuseable type device, ~ h an individual water bag and granular chemical provided in ea~ cell, such is definitely not preferred.
In the construction of Figs. 15-17, inclusive, then, parts which are exactly or substantially the same as parts in the previously described figures are numbered the same, but prime ¦.
Such parts will not be redescribed in detail. The description of the structure of these parts is here incorporated by reference from the previous parts of this specification.
Turnlng to the distinctive structure of Figs. 15-1l, inclusive, in the headband portion 30', there is but a single cell 100 which, when filled and sealed, contains one or more ¦ rupturable water bags 101 and 102, as well as a quantity of ¦ granular ammonium nitrate or other reactive chemical 103. In I assembly of the device, if, for filling, but one end, say 33', is left unsealed for fillinæ, a first water bag 102 may be inserted and pushed to the other end of the head band portion 30', a quantity of ammonium nitrate charged and then the second ¦ water bag 101. Use of one or more liquid or water bags in the cell is optional with the siæe of the bag beinæ proportioned to the number used and the quantity of ammonium nitrate or other ~ hea~ exchanging chemical employed therewith. Alternatively, a _4ll_ I ~2~62~0 1 1 first charge of ammonium nitrate is inserted in the head band ¦ portion 30~, then the water bag, then a second charge of ammonium nitrate.
Referring to the crown portion 44, the cells 49' and 50' each have a liquid or water bag 104 and 105 inserted therein from the free end filler openings as previously describéd with respect to filling of the reuseable chemical. Quantities of am~onium nitrate 106 (seen only with respect to cell 50') are also charged (or other heat exchanging chemical) and the reactive ~1~ ents of the endothermic or exothermic mixture sealed within ~e respective cells by the seams 48', 51' and 52', the last ~elng applied after filling and the former being provided before filling.
It additlonally should be mentioned that, after the head band 30' portion cell is filled, as well as each of the cells 49' and 50' of the crown portion, before the final heat seals are applied, air is expelled, as far as possible, from the cells before the sealing thereof. This is to enable readily feasible bursting (by compression) of the liquid or water bags 101, 102, 104 and 105 and, additionally, permit effective fitting and snaping Or the cells and application of the device to the patient's head (not hindered by air bubbles).
Typical quantities of water and ammonium nitrate in t~e headband portion 30' would be 650 grams of ~ater in 325 gram b~g packages before rupture and 650 grams of ammonium nitrate.
~n each of the crown section cells, a 225 gram water bag may be ~m2!e~ed with 225 grams of ammonium nitrate.
To apply the device of Figs. 15-17, inclusive to ^.
pat~ent, the device first is activated. The device may be laid d~wn flat on the flat upper surface of a table in a manner of i lZ~6210 1 ¦ illustration of Fig. 15 (or with the device inverted). The operat ~r ¦ then, one by one, presses down on the water bags with the heel of ¦ one hand to activate (burst) them. After activation of each of the cells, the manner of application of the device to the patient' 3 ¦ head is precisely as described with respect to the reuseable ¦ device of the previous figures. Accordingly, such will not be ¦ redescribed in detail.
¦ The point of the assembly application, as previously ¦ described, is to provide not only controlled constriction around the entire head band portion (as well as cooling from the head band into the constrictive zone), but also at least some com-paction on the entire top of the head from the completed cap ¦ with the cells of the head band and crown section pressed, one ¦ against the other and held down against the patient's head. Thus ¦ entire head heat exchange, as well as at least some over all ¦ head compaction or compression and head band constriction are ¦ all achieved in adjustable fashion for each individual user ¦ patient.
¦ The subject device, in both its reuseable and nonreuseab Le forms, possesses many advantages over the use of ice, per se.
¦ Patient comfort, pliability, convenience, sustained cooling and uniform surface cooling are all advantages achieved by the subject developments. The efficient action of these devices aids in reducing the physical, psychological and social trauma of expected hair loss in chemotherapy treatments. The subject devices are pliable, relatively lightweight and may be fitted without undue stress to the patient. Each of the devices mold conveniently to the specific size and shape of the patient's head and scalp.
I When applied irnmediately after freezing activation or ~reatment in the case of the reuseable device or chemical activation in --1 ,¦the case o~ the one-shot heat exchanger, cold treatment may be provided for up to 90 minutes, depending upon ambient temperatures Made of suitable materials, the reuseable device has a virtually l unlimited useful product life span under normal use and service.
¦ Fig. 21 ¦ In Fig. 21 there is shown an ear protector of convenient and effective form which may be employed to avoid discomfort and ~arache from prolonged application of cooling or heating heat ex~hange to the sc~lp of a patient. The device is generally designated 110 and typically comprises a pair of formed pieces or segments of insulating foam plastic 111 and 112 ~ich are heat ¦sealed together at the edge peripheries thereof as at 113. The ¦inboard (next to the patient's head) sheet or segment is verticall' , ¦and arcuately relieved in a door or window portion 114 thereof ¦centrally of the lower edge llla and opening out of the sa~e.
¦ mis relief enables the ear cover 110 to be fitted down over the patient's earlobe from above and gives complete coverage and protection to each ear and heat or cold insulation of effective protection.
Fi~s. 18-20, Inclusive In previous description of the application of the device to the patient's or user's head, stages of application have been previously described. Fig. 18 shows the crown portion of l the heat exchanging head piece being snugged down on the top of th~
¦natient's head, with the rear portion of the crown being pushed l into engagement with the outside surface of already made engage-i ment of the ends of the headband portion. Thus, the engagement of Fig. 10 is in the process of being made after the stage of Fig.
~ ~ 14. This is a ~oining of the Velcro or like material portions l; 63 and 62 on the insides or undersides of tab portions 59 and 1~ ~Z~6Z10 1 j~ 58, respect~vely, with the Velcro or li~e port~ons 41 of ~he elongate strip 40 which is overlying and in engagement (through side 39 thereof) with the like Velcro strip 43 on cell 37. As ¦ may be seen in Fig. 14, cells 35 and 37 are in substantial end ¦ abutment with one another by virtue of the noted tabs 39 and 43 being in positive engagement, thus to create a circumferential ¦ headband in essentially continuous contact with the lower portion ¦of the patient's scalp and preferably in slight construction ¦or compression thereon.
¦ Once the engagement is made as in Fig. 18, then the ¦tabs (54a and 53a as seen in Fig. 18 and 53b and 54b in other ¦view) are pulled both laterally and downwardly on each side of ¦the head to the desired position and adjustment for engagement ¦with the Velcro portions 41 on the left side of the head (Fig.
9) and 43 on the right hand side of the head (Fi~s. 10 and 18).
These engagements are also seen in Fig. 12, which is the underside view of the assembled cap. It should be noted that any initial engagements for mounting the~head piece on the patient may be redone and ad~usted as desired for optimum fit and full contact, as well as proper headband portion compression and constriction ¦and crown portion contact and compression down on the scalp.
¦Said otherwise, once the headband portion has been tightened and secured into correct position and desired con,';riction and com-¦pression by successive attachments as required, then the crown ¦port~on may be attached, adjusted and fixed with respect thereto ¦by means of successive en~a~ements of the rear tab portion on ¦the crown and the side tabs thereof, in order to have comfortable ¦yet full contact and pressurized engagement with tne entire scalp area of the patient, all without discomfort.
¦ Once the full, proper mounting of the head piece on 11 ~ 2,'l 6Z~) the patient's head by virtue of the Velcro enga~ements of the headband portlon ends to one another and the crown portion rear and side tabs to the headband portion Velcro external bands, l then, optionally, but preferably, a flnal application of elastic i bandage, wrapping same circumferentially around the headband portion, may be made. The elastic bandage is of conventional ¦ type, generally designated at 115 and is of a length sufficient to wrap circumferentially several times around the patient's head. If necessary, the inner free end of the bandage may be ¦ taped by adhesive tape to the outer surface of the head piece.
¦ The width of ~he bandage is preferably sufficient to slightly exceed the height of the assembled device (Figs. 9 and 10, as well as Fig. 7) on the patient's head. In this manner, the upper and lower edges of the elastic bandage, by virtue of the 1 elasticity thereof, curl in around and somewhat under the lower edge of the headband portion and over and inward of the upper edge of the headband portion and crown portion outer edges so as to give more than just peripheral coverage. This may be l seen in Figs. 19 and 20. Preferably, a minimum of three wraps 1 of bandage over the device are employed and the free end 115a ¦ remaining at the ends of the wrap may be secured by adhesive tape members 116 temporarily to the body of the bandage to hold such.
¦ The purpose of this wrap is multi-fold. In the first ¦¦ place, heat or cooling loss from the heat exchange cells of the device is minimized during application of the device. Secondly, additional compaction and constriction, to the de~ree desired and to make most effective the headband portion compression and con-i striction may be applied. This makes it less necessary that the ¦ precise desired constriction and compression be entirely achieved ~` ~2162~0 with the Velcro or like material attachment. It also, by making 1~ 1 l more sure of the adjustment of the device on the head of the ! patient, permits greater freedom of movement of the patient's head ¦during the time of chemotherapy.
¦ The sub~ect device has been found to offer chemotherapy ¦patients safe, comfortable application of cold therapy to the ¦scalp. Scalp hypothermia has been proven effective in the ¦prevention of hair loss among patients receiving Doxorubicin.
I mus, additionally, see Anderson, J.E. et al "Prevention Of ¦Doxorubicin-Induced Alopecia By Scalp Cooling In Patients With Advanced Breast Cancer" British Medical Journal 282: 423-424, 1981.
From the foregoing, it will be seen that this invention is one well adapted to attain all of the ends and objects hereinabove set forth together with other advantages which are obvious and which are inherent to the apparatus.
It will be understood that certain features and sub-¦combinations are of utility and may be employed without reference ¦to other features and subcombinations. This is contemplated ¦by and is within the scope of the claims.
¦ As many possible embodiments may be made of the ¦invention without departing from the scope thereof, it is to be ¦understood that all matter herein set forth or shown in the ¦accompanying drawings is to be interpreted as illustrative and ¦not in a limiting sense.
~ p~

l -50-

Claims (36)

CLAIMS:
1. A heat exchanging head piece for cooling or heating substantially the entire scalp (hair bearing) area of the human head, comprising, in combination:

an elongate, substantially rectangular headband portion adapted to be continuously and circumferentially wrapped around the human head, including the forehead, the temple-ear head side zones and the lower back portion of the cranial vault, said headband portion having substantially parallel, spaced apart, opposed upper and lower edges and end edges, the latter substantially at right angles to the former, said headband portion also having inner and outer faces with respect to the head of a user, as well as two free ends at the extremities thereof, means releasably and repeatably engagable between the free ends of the said headband portion adapted to releasably and repeatably secure said free ends together, in contact with one another, in adjustable headband size fashion, to form a continuous headband around the head of a human subject, said headband portion comprising at least one elongate, hollow cell of sealed, liquid tight construction.
said cell containing temperature affectable material for heat exchange, a crown portion for said head piece having a forward end and edge secured centrally to the substantial center of the upper edge of the headband portion, side edges extending rearwardly from the said forward edge secure-ment and a free rear end and edge spaced rearwardly from and substantially parallel to said forward edge thereof, said crown portion also having inner and outer faces with respect to the head of a user, said crown portion comprising at least one elongate, hollow cell of sealed, liquid tight construction, said cell containing temperature affectable materials for heat exchange, means adjacent the rear end edge of said crown portion on the inner face thereof adapted to releasably and repeatably secure the crown portion rear end to the outer face of the said headband portion substantially 180° away from and opposed to the crown portion forward edge securement to the headband portion, in adjustable crown size fashion, and means for releasably and repeatably securing the side edges of the crown portion, intermediate the forward and rearward ends and edges thereof, to opposed outer side faces of the headband portion, whereby to form, when the free ends of the headband portion are releasably secured together, the rear end of the crown portion is releasably secured to the headband portion and the side edges of the crown portion are releasably secured to the side faces of the headband portion, a reuseable, size adjustable, substantially continuous contact, scalp contacting head piece for substantially completely and uniformly heat exchanging substantially the entire hair bearing zone of the human scalp.
2. A head piece as in Claim 1 wherein said headband portion includes a plurality of elongate, axially series aligned, hollow cells of sealed, liquid-tight construction, said cells each containing temperature affectable materials for heat exchange.
3. A head exchanging head piece as in Claim 2 wherein said headband portion includes three substantially equal length such hollow cells of sealed, liquid tight construction.
4. A heat exchanging head piece as in Claim 1 wherein the crown portion includes two elongate, hollow cells of sealed, liquid tight construction of substantially equal size, said cells each containing temperature affectable materials for heat exchange, said cells extending substantially parallel to one another and substantially at right angles to the forward connection of the crown portion to the headband portion.
5. A head piece as in Claim 1 wherein the temperature affectable material in the headband portion and crown portion cells comprises a fluidic chemical substance which is refrigerable for cooling purposes.
6. A head piece as in Claim 1 wherein the temperature effectable material in the headband portion and crown portion cells comprises a fluidic chemical substance which is heatable for heating purposes.
7. A head piece as in Claim 1 wherein the temperature affectable material in the headband portion and crown portion cells comprises a fluidic chemical substance which is refrigerable for cooling purposes and heatable for heating purposes.
8. A head piece as in Claim 1 wherein the crown section next to the headband connection thereof is divided into two substantially equal size, hollow cells of sealed, liquid-tight construction, said cells each containing temperature affectable material for heat exchange.
9. A head piece as in Claim 1 wherein the headband portion is divided into three, substantially equal length, separate hollow cells of sealed, liquid-tight construction, said cells each containing temperature affectable material for heat exchange, said cells each separated from one another by a seam extending at substantial right angles between the upper and lower edges of the said headband portion and substantially parallel to the end edges of said headband portion.
10. A head piece as in Claim 9 wherein at least the forward portion of the crown section is divided into two elongate, hollow cells of sealed, liquid-tight construction, said cells each containing temperature affectable material for heat exchange said cells separated and divided from one another by a seam sub-stantially dividing in half said crown portion, said seam extending at substantial right angles to the upper edge of said headband portion.
11. A head piece as in Claim 1 wherein the said headband portion is at least sufficiently long that the end edges thereof will at least substantially abut one another, when said headband portion is continuously and circumferentially wrapped around a human head.
12. A head piece as in Claim 1 wherein the means for securing the headband portion end edges together comprises a first elongate length of removably engagable means fixed to the outer face of one end of said headband portion and a second elongate length of removably engageable material fixed in a portion of the length thereof to the inside face of the other end of said headband portion with a further portion of the length thereof extending beyond said end, said first and second lengths removably engagable, one with the other.
13. A head piece as in Claim 1 wherein the means for securing the side edges of the crown portion to the opposed outer side faces of the headband portion comprises at least one depending tab having removably engaging means thereon fixed to each side edge of the crown portion and further removably engaging means fixed to the opposed outer side faces of the headband portion, the former each being adapted to be releasably engaged to one of the outer side faces of the headband portion on one side thereof by the releasable engaging means thereon.
14. A heat exchanging head piece as in Claim 1 wherein the means for releasably and repeatably securing the side edges of the crown portion to the opposed outer side faces of the head-band portion comprise at least four tab members each having removably engaging means thereon, two of said tabs fixed to each of the side edges of the crown portion intermediate the forward and rearward edges thereof, said tabs each releasably and removably securable to the opposed outer side faces of the head-band portion on each side thereof by releasably engageable means fixed to said opposed outer side faces.
15. A head piece as in Claim 1 wherein the means at the rear end edge of the crown portion adapted to releasably and repeatably secure the crown portion rear end to the headband portion includes a rearward tab extension of the crown portion of sufficient length and width that it is able to overlie, contact and engage a substantial portion of the outer face of at least one of the free end portions of the headband portion after the latter have been removably secured to one another, the underside of said crown portion rearward tab extension and a portion of the outer face of at least one of said headband end portions having means thereon for releasably engaging one with the other.
16. A head piece as in Claim 1 wherein said headband portion includes three substantially equal length, elongate, axially serially aligned, hollow cells of sealed, liquid-tight con-struction, said cells each containing temperature effectable materials for heat exchange, a center one of said headband portion cells being the substantial length of the securement of the crown portion forward end and edge to the substantial center of the upper edge of the headband portion.
17. A heat exchanging head piece as in Claim 16 wherein the crown portion includes two elongate, hollow cells of sealed, liquid-tight construction of substantial equal size, said cells each containing temperature affectable material for heat exchange, said cells extending substantially parallel to one another and substantially at right angles to the forward connection of the crown portion to the headband portion, the width of said crown portion cells adjacent the connection of the crown portion to the headband portion being greater than the length of the center cell of the head band portion.
18. A head piece as in Claim 17 wherein the width of said crown portion cells in the portions thereof spaced farthest away from the head band to crown connection is substantially equal to the center cell of the headband portion.
19. A head piece as in Claim 1 wherein said headband portion includes three substantially equal length elongate, axially serially aligned, hollow cells of sealed, liquid-tight con-struction, said cells each containing temperature affectable materials for heat exchange, the crown portion includes two elongate, hollow cells of sealed, liquid-tight construction of substan-tially equal size, said cells each containing tempera-ture affectable materials for heat exchange, said cells extending substantially parallel to one another and substantially at right angles to the forward connection of the crown portion to the headband portion, the connection of said crown portion to said head-band portion being substantially the width of the center headband portion cell and registered therewith, there being a length of releasably securable means fixed along the substantial length of the outer face of each of the two end cells of the headband portion, there being an additional length of releasably securable means fixed in a portion of the length thereof to the inside face of one end cell of said headband portion with a further portion of the length thereof extending beyond said end, the means at the rear edge of the crown portion adapted to releasably and repeatedly secure the crown portion rear end to the headband portion including a rearward tab extension at the crown portion of sufficient length and width that it is able to overlie, contact and engage a substantial portion of the outer face of at least one of the free end portions of the head-band after the latter have been removably secured to one another, the underside of said crown portion rearward tab extension having at least one length of releasably securable means thereon, and means for securing the side edges of the crown portion to opposed outer side faces of the headband portion comprising at least one depending tab having removably securable means thereon adapted to be releasably engaged to one of the outer side faces of the headband portion on each side thereof by the engaging means thereon.
20. A heat exchanging head piece for cooling or heating substantially the entire scalp (hair bearing) area of the human head, comprising, in combination:

an elongate, substantial rectangular headband portion adapted to be releasably, repeatably and length adjustably continuously and circumferentially wrapped around a human head, including the forehead, the temple-ear head side zones and the lower back portion of the cranial vault, said headband portion having substantially parallel, spaced apart, opposed upper and lower edges and end edges, the latter positioned substantially at right angles to the former, said portion also having inner and outer faces with-respect to the head of a user, as well as two free ends at the extremities thereof, the headband portion divided into three discrete, elongate, series aligned, substantially rectangular hollow cells of substantially equal length, said cells each containing temperature effectable materials for heat exchange, the headband portion being of sufficient length that the end edges thereof at least abut one another when circumferentially wrapped around a human head, means releasably, repeatably and adjustably engage-able between the free ends of said headband portion adapted to secure said free ends together, in sub-stantial contact with one another, to form a variably sizeable, but continuous, heat exchanging headband portion, a crown portion for said head piece having a forward end and edge thereof secured centrally to the substantial center of the upper edge of the headband portion, side edges thereof extending rearwardly from the said forward edge securement and a rear end and edge spaced rearwardly from and substantially parallel to the forward end and edge, said crown portion having inner and outer faces with respect to the head of a user, the forward portion of said crown section divided into two elongate, hollow cells of sealed, liquid-tight construction, said cells each containing temperature affectable materials for heat exchange, at least one elongate, outwardly extending crown tab portion connected to each one of the side edges of the crown portion intermediate the forward and rear ends thereof, means adjacent the rear end of said crown portion adapted to releasably, repeatedly and adjustably secure the crown portion rear end to a part of the outer face of said headband portion substantially 180° away from and opposed to the crown portion forward edge securement to the headband portion, said latter means comprising a rearward tab extension of the crown portion adapted to lie against the outermost face of one of the free end secured portions of the headband portion after the end edges of the latter have been secured to one another and be releasably, repeatably and adjustably attached thereto, said crown tab portions adapted to removably, repeatably and adjustably secure the side edges of the crown portion to the outer side faces of the headband portion, whereby to form, when the end edges of the headband portion are secured together, the rear tab extension of the crown portion is secured to the head-band portion and the side edges of the crown portion are secured to the outer side faces of the headband portion, a substantially continuously scalp contacting headpiece for substantially completely and uniformly heat exchanging substantially the entire head bearing zone of the human scalp.
21. A heat exchanging head piece for heat exchanging substantially the entire scalp (hair bearing) area of the head of a human user, comprising, in combination:

an elongate, substantially rectangular headband portion adapted to be continuously and circumferentially wrapped around a human head, including the forehead, the temple-ear head side zones and the lower back portion of the cranial vault, said headband portion having substantially parallel, spaced apart, opposed upper and lower edges and end edges, the latter substantially at right angles to the former, said headband portion also having inner and outer faces with respect to the head of the user, as well as two free ends at the extremities thereof, means releasably and adjustably engageable between the free ends of said headband portion adapted to releasably secure said free ends together, in contact with one another, in adjustable head band sizing fashion, to form a continuous, optionally somewhat compressive headband around and gripping the head of a human subject, said headband portion comprising at least one elongate, hollow cell of sealed, liquid-tight construc-tion, said cell containing materials effective, at least upon activation thereof, for scalp heat exchange of the head of the user, a crown portion for said head piece having a forward end and edge secured centrally to the substan-tial center of the upper edge of the headband portion, side edges extending rearwardly from said forward edge securement and a free rear end and edge thereof spaced rearwardly from and substantially parallel to said forward edge thereof, said crown portion also having inner and outer faces with respect to the head of the user, said crown portion comprising at least one elongate, hollow cell of sealed, liquid-tight construction, said cell containing materials effective, at least upon activation thereof, for scalp heat exchange of the head of the user, means adjacent the rear end edge of said crown portion on the inner face thereof and on parts of the headband portion outer face adapted to releasably and adjustably secure the crown portion rear end to the outer face of said headband portion substantially 180 degrees away from and opposed to the crown portion forward edge securement to the headband portion, in adjustable, head fitting and optionally somewhat com-pressive crown sizing fashion, and means for releasably and adjustably securing the side edges of the crown portion, intermediate the forward and rearward ends and edges thereof, to opposed outer side faces of the headband portion, whereby to form, when (a) the free ends of the headband portion are releasably secured together, (b) the rear end of the crown portion is releasably secured to the headband portion and (c) the side-edges of the crown portion are releasably secured to the side faces of the headband portion, a head fitting, optionally somewhat compressing and constricting, variably size adjustable, substantially continuous contact, scalp contacting head piece for substantially completely and uniformly heat exchanging substantially the entire hair bearing zone of the head of a human user.
22. A head piece as in Claim 21 wherein said head-band portion includes but a single elongate 3 hollow cell of sealed, liquid-tight construction, said cell containing separated materials effective for heat exchange only upon mixing of one component thereof with the other.
23. A heat exchanging head piece as in Claim 21 wherein the crown portion includes two elongate, hollow cells of sealed, liquid-tight construction of substantially equal size, said cells each containing separated materials effective for heat exchange only upon mixing of one of the components thereof with the other said cells extending substantially parallel to one another and substantially at right angles to the forward connection of the crown portion to the headband portion.
24. A head piece as in Claim 21 wherein the said headband portion is at least sufficiently long that the end edges thereof will at least substantially abut one another, when said headband portion is continuously and circumferentially wrapped around the head of the user.
25. A head piece as in Claim 21 wherein the means for securing the headband portion end edges together comprises a first elongate length of removably engageable means fixed to the outer face of one end of the headband portion and a second elongate piece of removably engageable material fixed in a portion of the length thereof to the inside face of the other end of said headband portion with a further portion of the length thereof extending beyond said end, said first and second lengths removably engageable, one with the other, at any point along the length thereof.
26. A head piece as in Claim 21 wherein the means for securing the side edges of the crown portion to the opposed outer side faces of the headband portion comprises at least one depending tab having removably engaging means thereon fixed to each side edge of the crown portion and further removably engaging means fixed to the opposed outer side faces of the headband portion, the former each being adapted to be releasably engaged to one of the outer side faces of the headband portion on one side thereof by the releasable engaging means thereon.
27. A heat exchanging head piece as in Claim 1 wherein the means for releasably and adjustably securing the side edges of the crown portion to the opposed outer side faces of the head-band portion comprise at least four tab members, each tab member having removably engaging means thereon, two of said tabs fixed to each of side edges of the crown portion intermediate the forward and rearward edges thereof, said tabs each releasably and adjustably secureable to the opposed outer side faces of the headband portion on each side thereof by lengths of releasably engageable means fixed to said opposed outer side faces of the headband portion.
28. A head piece as in Claim 21 wherein the means at the rear end edge of the crown portion adapted to releasably and adjustably secure the crown portion rear end to the headband portion includes a rearward tab extension on the crown portion of sufficient length and width that such is able to overlie, con-tact and engage a substantial portion of the outer face of at least one of the free end portions of the headband portion after the latter have been removably secured to one another, the underside of said crown portion rearward tab extension and a portion of each of said headband end portions having releasable engaging means thereon for the said crown portion rearward tab extension to releasably engage therewith.
29. A head piece as in Claim 21 wherein the means for releasably and adjustably securing the side edges of the crown portion with the opposed outer side faces of the head band portion comprise at least four tab members having removably engaging means on one side thereof, two of said tabs fixed to each of the side edges of the crown portion intermediate the forward and rearward edges thereof with the others of said tabs each positioned closely adjacent the forward edge thereof on opposite sides of the crown portion, said tabs each releasably and removably securable to the opposed, outer side faces of the headband portion on each side thereof, in a crown portion connection to the headband portion, by releasably connecting to lengths of releasably engageable means fixed to the headband portion opposed outer side faces.

30. In a heat exchanging head piece for cooling or heating substantially the entire scalp (hair bearing) area of the human head, comprising, in combination:
an elongate, substantially rectangular headband portion adapted to be continuously and circumferentially wrapped around a human head, including the forehead, the temple-ear head side zones and the lower back portion of the cranial vault, said headband portion having substantially parallel, spaced apart, opposed upper and lower edges and end edges, the latter positioned substantially at right angles to the former, said headband portion also having inner and outer faces with respect to the head of a user, as well as two free ends at the extremities thereof, said headband portion comprising at least one elongate, hollow cell of sealed, liquid tight construction, said cell containing temperature affectable material for heat exchange, a crown portion for said head piece having a forward end and edge secured centrally to the substantial center of the upper edge of the headband portion, side edges extending rearwardly from the said forward edge securement and a free rear end and edge spaced rearwardly from and substantially parallel to said forward edge thereof, said crown portion also having inner and outer faces with respect to the head of a user, said crown portion comprising at least one elonqate, hollow cell of sealed, liquid tight construction, said cell containing temperature affectable material for heat exchanqe, the improvement which comprises:
Claim 30 Cont'd.
(1) means releasably and repeatably engageable between the free ends of the said headband portion adapted to releasably and repeatably secure said free ends together, in contact over one another, in adjustable headband size fashion to form a continuous headband around the head of a human subject, said means for securing the headband portion end edges together comprising a first elongated length of releasably engageable material fixed to the outer face of one end of said headband portion and a second elongate length of releasable engaging material fixed in a portion of the length thereof to the inside face of the other end of said headband portion, with a further portion of the length thereof extending beyond said end, said first and second lengths removably engageable, one with the other;
(2) means adjacent the rear end of said crown portion, on the inner face thereof, adapted to releasably and repeatably secure the crown portion rear end to the outer face of said headband portion substantially 180°
away from and opposed to the crown portion forward edge securement to the headband portion, in adjustable crown size fashion, the said means at the rear end edge of the crown portion adapted to releasably and repeatably secure the crown portion rear end to the headband portion including a rearward tab extension of the crown portion of suffi-cient length and width that it is able to overlie, contact and engage a substantial portion of the outerface of both of the free end portions of the headband portion after the latter have been removably secured to one another, the underside of said crown portion rearward tab extension and a portion of the outer face of each one of the headband end portions having means thereon for releasably engaging the tab extension with the said headband end portions; and (3) means for releasably and repeatably securing the side edges of the crown portion, intermediate the forward and rearward ends and edges thereof, to opposed outer side faces of the headband portion, whereby to form, when:
(a) the free ends of the headband portion are releasably secured together, (b) the rear end of the crown portion is releasably secured to the headband portion and (c) the side edges of the crown portion are releasably secured to the side faces of the headband portion, a reuseable, size adjustable, substantially continuous contact, scalp contacting head piece for substantially completely and uniformly heat exchanging substantially the entire hair bearing zone of the human scalp, the means for securing the side edges of the crown portion to the opposed outer side faces of the headband portion comprising at least two depending tab having releasable engaging means thereon fixed to each side edge of the crown portion and, further, lengths of releasable engaging means fixed to the opposed outer side faces of the headband por-tion, the said pairs of depending tabs each being adapted to be individually releasably engaged to one of the outer side faces of the headband portion by the releasable engaging means thereon.

31. A heat exchanging head piece for repeatedly cooling or heating substantially the entire scalp (hair bearing) area of the human head, comprising, in combination:

Claim 31 Cont'd.
(1) an elongate, substantially rectangular head band portion adapted to be continuously and circumferentially wrapped around the human head, including the forehead, the temple-ear head side zones and the lower back portion of the cranial vault, said headband portion having substantially parallel, spaced apart, opposed upper and lower edges and end edges, the latter positioned substantially at right angles to the former, said headband portion also having inner and outer faces with respect to the head of the user, as well as two free ends at the extremities thereof, said headband portion including three elongate, axially series aligned, hollow cells of sealed, liquid tight construction, said cells each containing temperature affect-able materials for heat exchange, one of said cells positioned in symmetrical opposition to the crown portion and being at least substantially the width thereof, the other two cells outboard of said first described cell being of substantially equal length to one another and each such being at least sub-stantially free of any connection to the said crown portion;
(2) a crown portion for such head piece having a forward end and edge secured centrally to the substantial center of the upper edge of the headband portion, side edges extending rearwardly from the said forward edge securement and a free rear end and edge spaced rearwardly from and substantially parallel to said forward edge thereof, said crown portion also having inner and outer faces with respect to the head of the user, said crown portion including two elongate, hollow cells of sealed, liquid-tight construction of substantially Claim 31 Cont'd.
equal size and substantially congruent form, said cells each containing temperature effectable materials for heat exchange, said cells extending substantially parallel to one another and substantially at right angles to the forward connection of the crown portion to the headband portion;
(3) means releasably and repeatably engageable between the free ends of the said head band portion adapted to releasably and repeatably secure said free ends together, at least in close adjacency to one another, in adjustable head band size fashion, to form a continuous head band around the head of a human subject, said means for securing the head portion end edges together comprising a first elongate length of removably engageable material fixed to the outer face of one end of said headband portions and a second elongate length of removably engageable material fixed in a portion of the length thereof to the inside face of the other end of said headband portion, with a further portion of the latter length thereof extending beyond said end, said first and second lengths removably engageable, one with the other;
(4) said headband portion being at least suffi-ciently long that the end edges thereof will at least sub-stantially abut one another, when said headband portion is continuously and circumferentially wrapped around a human head;
(5) means adjacent the rear end of said crown portion, on the inner face thereof, adapted to releasably and repeatably secure the crown portion rear end to the outer face of said headband portion substantially 180° away from and opposed to the crown portion forward edge securement to the
Claim 31 Cont'd.
headband portion, in adjustable crown size fashion, the said means at the rear end edge of the crown portion comprising a rearward tab extension of the crown portion of sufficient length and width that such extension is able to overlie, contact and engage a portion of the outer end face of each of the free end portions of the headband portion after the latter have been removably secured to one another, the underside of said crown portion rearward tab extension and a portion of the outer end face of each of the headband end portions having means thereon for releasably engaging, one with the other;
(6) the width of said crown portion cells adjacent the connection of the crown portion to the headband portion being greater than the width of the center cell of the head-band portion, and the width of said crown portion cells in the portions thereof spaced farthest away from the headband-crown connection being equal to a substantial portion of the width of the center cell of the headband portion, said crown portion cells not extending into said crown portion rearward tab extension, the front connection of said crown portion to said headband portion being substantially the width of the center headband portion cell and in registry therewith; and (7) means for releasably and repeatably securing the side edges of the crown portion to opposed outer side faces of the headband portion, whereby to form, when:
(a) the free ends of the headband portions are releasably secured together, (b) the rearward tab extension of the crown portion is releasably secured to the ends of the head-band portion and (c) the side edges of the crown portion are releasably secured to the side faces of the headband portion, a reusable, size adjustable, substantially continuous contact, scalp contacting head piece for substantially completely and uniformly heat exchanging substantially the entire hair bear-ing zone of the human scalp, the means for securing the side edges of the crown portion to the opposed outer side faces of the headband portion comprising, first, two depending tabs on each of the side edges of the crown portion, said tabs each having removable engaging means on the inner faces thereof and being fixed at one end thereof to a side edge of the crown portion, one of said two tabs depending from the forward side edge of each respective crown portion edge and the other of said tabs depending from each said crown portion side edge at a position substantially intermediate the forward and rearward edges there-of and, second, lengths of removable engaging means fixed to the opposed outer side faces of the headband portion in the entire length of the outer cells thereof, the said depending tabs each being individually adapted to be releasably and adjustably engaged to a chosen portion of one of the outer side faces of the headband portion by the releasable engaging means thereon.
32. A heat exchanging head piece as in Claim 31 wherein the temperature affectable material in both the headband portion cells and crown portion cells comprises a fluidic chemical substance which is repeatably refrigerable for repeated cooling purposes and also repeatedly heatable for repeated heating purposes.
33. A heat exchanging head piece as in Claim 31 wherein the temperature affectable material in the headband portion cells and crown portion cells comprises a fluidic chemical substance which is repeatably refrigerable for repeated cooling purposes.
34. A heat exchanging head piece as in Claim 31 wherein the temperature affectable material in the headband portion cells and crown portion cells comprises a fluidic chemical substance which is repeatably heatable for repeated heating purposes.
35. A heat exchanging head piece as in Claim 30 wherein said headband portion is at least sufficiently long that the end edges thereof abut one another and at least substantially overlie and underlie one another, when said headband portion is continuously and circumferentially wrapped around a human head.

36. A heat exchanging head piece for single shot cooling or heating of substantially the entire scalp (hair bearing) area of the human head, comprising, in combination:
(1) an elongate, substantially rectangular head-band portion adapted to be continuously and circumferentially wrapped around the human head, including the forehead, the temple-ear head side zones and the lower back portion of the cranial vault;
(2) said headband portion having substantially parallel, spaced apart, opposed upper and lower edges and end Claim 36 Cont'd...(a) edges, the latter positioned substantially at right angles to the former, said headband portion also having inner and outer faces with respect to the head of the user, as well as two free ends at the extremities thereof, said headband portion made up of but one elongate, hollow cell of sealed, liquid-tight construction, said cell containing separated materials effective for heat exchange only upon mixing of one component thereof with the other;
(3) a crown portion for such head piece having a forward end and edge secured centrally to the substantial center of the upper edge of the headband portion, side edges extending rearwardly from the said forward edge securement and a free rear end and edge spaced rearwardly from and substantially parallel to said forward edge thereof, said crown portion also having inner and outer faces with respect to the head of the user, said crown portion including two elongate, hollow cells of sealed, liquid-tight construction of substantially equal size and substantially congruent form, said cell each containing separated materials effective for heat exchange only upon mixing of one of the components thereof with the other, said cells extending substantially parallel to one another and substantially at right angles to the forward con-nection of the crown portion to the headband portion;
(4) means releasably and repeatably engageable between the free ends of the headband portion adapted to releasably and repeatably secure said free ends together, at least in close adjacency to one another, in adjustable head-band size fashion, to form a continuous headband around the claim 36 continued..... (b) head of a human subject, said means for securing the head portion end edges together comprising a first elongate length of removably engageable material fixed to the outer face of one end of said headband portions and a second elongate length of removably engageable material fixed in a portion of the length thereof to the inside face of the other end of said headband portion, with a further portion of the latter length extending beyond said end, said first and second lengths removably engageable, one with the other;
(5) said headband portion being at least sufficiently long that the end edges thereof will at least substantially abut one another, when said headband portion is continuously and circumferentially wrapped around a human head;
(6) means adjacent the rear end of said crown portion, on the inner face thereof, adapted to releasably and repeatably secure the crown portion rear end to the outer face of said headband portion substantially 180° away from and opposed to the crown portion forward edge securement to the head portion in adjustable crown size fashion, said means at the rear end edge of the crown portion comprising a rearward tab extension of the crown portion of sufficient length and width that such extension is able to overlie, contact and engage a portion of the outer end face of each of the free end portions of the headband portion after the latter have been removably secured to one another, the underside of said crown portion rearward tab extension and a portion of the outer end face of each of the headband end
claim 36 coninued.....(c) portions having means thereon for releasably engaging together, one with the other; and (7) means for releasably and repeatably securing the side edges of the crown portion to opposed outer side faces of the headband portion, whereby to form, when: (a) the free ends of the headband portion are releasably secured together, (b) the rearward tab extension of the crown portion is releasably secured to the ends of the headband portion and (c) the side edges of the crown portion are releasably secured to the side faces of the headband portion, a one-shot, size adjustable, substantially continuous contact, scalp contacting head piece for substantially completely and uniformly heat exchanging the entire hair bearing zone of the human scalp, the means for securing the side edges of the crown portion to the opposed outer side faces of the headband portion comprising, first, two depending tabs on each of the side edges of the crown portion, said tabs each having removable engaging means thereon and being fixed at one end thereof to a side edge of the crown portion, one of said two tabs depending from the forward side edge of each respective crown portion edge and the other of said tabs depending from each said crown portion side edge at a position sub-stantially intermediate the forward and rearward edges thereof and, second, lengths of removable engaging means fixed to the opposed outer side faces of the headband portion in substantially the en-tire length of the outer end portions thereof past the crown portion connection to said headband portion, the said depending tabs each being individually adapted to releasably and adjustably engage to a chosen portion of one of the outer side faces of the headband portion by the releasable engaging means thereon.
CA000443898A 1982-12-29 1983-12-21 Reuseable heat transfer devices for the scalp Expired CA1216210A (en)

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US06/454,413 US4765338A (en) 1982-12-29 1982-12-29 Reuseable heat transfer devices for the scalp
US454,413 1982-12-29

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